Yellow, big brain PC users 🖖

I’m traveling and moving a lot for quite a while now, and getting a rig was never part of my plan

But recently I realized I can get a mini-itx and bring it anywhere I want

Looking for your advices and build configurations

I want it to be like top, but without it just be overpriced. I don’t care for LEDs, as small and as powerful as possible, high-mini-atx-end 😄

Thank yowoou

  • xyguy@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    I can personally vouch for the Cooler Master NR200. Its super nice to build in and very versatile with PSU and GPU configuration.

    The version I built for a friend had a 5600x with a Noctua NH-U9S and a 6700xt and absolutely zero issues with cooling.

    Other than that, same thing others are saying, start with the case and power supply and then work backwards.

    • Sunoiki@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’ll second that. I have a 5800x and 3070 Ti in mine, runs great. CPU is cooled with an Arctic LF 2 280 AIO, which I wouldn’t recommend to a stranger as it’s pretty tight and probably not great for the tubes, but the point being that you can fit some fairly beefy gear. Don’t think I would would gain much performance with a larger case as with all the ventilation everything is drawing fresh air.

      • Telorand@reddthat.com
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        1 year ago

        Thirded. Excellent for beginners and people new to ITX, and there’s a big community around that case alone.

        ETA: Machines and More on YouTube has many, many videos that cover the NR200 and build options.

    • jo3shmoo@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      Same here. The NR200 has hosted my gaming rig for over a year now with a 5800x3D and a 3090. Airflow is reversed to pull air in the back and bottom and blow it out the top, with some thin noctua fans on the bottom intake to get a little extra airflow to the GPU. It’s a super capable and portable build. My brother did a near identical build with a 3070.

      Also it fits in this nice sewing machine bag. I’ve brought it to friends houses to introduce them to VR and it perfectly holds an NR200, some power cables, a controller and my keyboard. https://a.co/d/anJj9sM

  • doczombie@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been running ITX gaming builds for years, they work great and I don’t use expansion ports anyways.

    My advice would be choose the case you want first. Bigger ITX cases will take standard components easily (with some limits on GPU length), but if you want Very Small and Mighty (e.g. DanCase, Fractal Design Terra), component choice becomes very important. You’ll need to consider cpu, gpu, and cooling clearances.

    It’s like PC building on moderately hard mode, it’s a little more difficult but the results are worth it!

  • thisNotMyName@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My 2 cents on cases: you really need to check the sizes of your gpu, psu (if non is built into the case, then check the wattage) and cpu cooler. I’ve built 3 mini itx builds so far. one in a custom case, one in a fractal design core 500 (pretty large, but fits 2 3.5" and a 5.25", large GPU and ATX PSU. That’s my homeserver sitting under the desk) and one in a NZXT H1 v2 (v1 had issues with the riser). The latter is very thought through, building in it was straight forward and easy.

    • Gooey0210@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, it seems I really need to see what cases are available and what GPUs are available

      I’m living in a not very developed country, so choice is limited, options like 180mm, 200mm, 220mm, and more

      So I can narrow stuff down by these sizes

      (I read all the messages, and then went researching, so now came with the results😁)

  • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Start with the case, pick one or a few you like the look of, then look up builds on pcpartpicker and/or youtube.

    Optimum Tech has a good roundup video of the good SFF cases that exist, and has reviews for each of them, as well.

    I’m assuming you want to air-cool, IMO water cooling tiny cases is just a pain, but it can be necessary to fit the rad sizes required for hotter CPUs.

    From there, pick the gpu next, look up what the max size of the GPU is for the case, and pick the best card that still fits. If you can’t find something you like, find another case.

    Pick a motherboard, this is easy, any itx will work. Make sure it has an M.2 slot and grab one of those for storage. If you need multiple terabytes, 2.5" sata ssds or even hdds are worth considering, if on a budget.

    After that, pick the CPU cooler and CPU together, making sure the cooler can fit by checking the max height. Deliberately going for a low TDP chip here will let you get away with a low profile cooler without having to push the fans into loud rpms. Noctua has a handy lookup table where you can view which chips can be effectively kept in check by which coolers, and how well.

    Last, figure out your system wattage and pick an SFX power supply. Watch out here, some cases require you to use a “smaller” SFX psu, as their lengths can vary.

  • KptnAutismus@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    you can get a really small RTX 3060 or even 3060ti, plus bequiet makes a low profile cooler that sits flat like the stock amd one. i would probably go with a Ryzen 5000-something (whatever you want to spend) in a b550 motherboard or something similar. and of course m.2 drives. don’t even think about SATA.

    • Gooey0210@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      1 year ago

      It took me like last 8 hours yo research this stuff

      I found out that 4070 is a little bit too long for many small builds

      I started researching into 4060, but they are still pretty big and as I understand don’t really worth the money, as 3060 would be even better

      Now I found ASUS Phoenix GeForce RTX 3060, which is like 12gb, one fan, 177mm

      Ah, and I found one around me for $200, compared to $600 for dual 4070 (I’m currently living in a not really developed country, that’s why odd prices)

      A lot of thinking, a lot of thinking 🤪