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roberta591's avatar
roberta591
Hero (Retired)
9 years ago

Re: PC: My Sims 4 game crashes in the middle of gameplay

@maryb72 cyberpowerpc.com sells computers with off the shelf components like if you were building it yourself. The system direct from cyberpowerpc are configurable - in other words you can upgrade and downgrade parts. Amazon second sources the computers from cyberpowerpc. Your going to be in the $600 and up for something with enough power to play today's games.

I configured a solid mid level gaming computer cyberpowerpc.com I upgraded a few parts and it came to $850

AMD 6300 cpu

Nvidia GTX 960 video card - upgrade

Corsair water cooler - upgrade

Corsair memory - upgrade

600w power supply - upgrade

This is close to my gaming computer.

I have bought cyberpowerpc computers and I recommend them.

10 Replies

  • maryb72's avatar
    maryb72
    9 years ago

    @roberta591 So I didn't see the Nivida one so this way the closet I got GeForce® GTX 960 4GB GDDR5 (Maxwell). And this is the cpu AMD FX-6300 3.50 GHz Six-Core AM3+ CPU 6MB L2 Cache & Turbo Core Technology. And the rest I got. Does that look about right?

  • roberta591's avatar
    roberta591
    Hero (Retired)
    9 years ago

    @maryb72 The GTX 960 - the chip is made by Nvidia. Looks about right. Like I said you will have to update the Intel video drivers AND edit the game files so the video is configured correctly. Most modern video chips will have to be edited into the game. I think I gave you a link for a how to. I looked up the Maxwell GTX 960 - that's an EVGA GTX 960 which is what I have. Fry's Electronics has it for $169.99 which is $20 cheaper then I paid.

    the cyberpowerpc.com computer is real close to my gaming computer and it plays Fallout 4 and Rise of the Tombraider (ROTT was patched for DX12).

    Updating video drivers is just part of being a gamer.

  • roberta591's avatar
    roberta591
    Hero (Retired)
    9 years ago

    @maryb72 I stay away from beta drivers unless I have problems with the standard driver. Gaming video drivers are optimized for speed - beta drivers could (may) not perform as good as standard drivers and may not be checked for bugs (that's why they call it a beta driver). The average consumer computer user should stay away from unknowns and stay away from the deep end of the pool until they can at least get themselves out of trouble