1) Did you play the demo yet to verify that you like factorio?
1b) Do you want the option to build a megafactory (also known as: do you plan to play more or less than 500~1000 hours :p?)
2) Can you (or a friend) assemble a desktop system or do you need a pre-built one?
3) How expensive is electricity where you live?
Why i ask about electricity? Because where i live it's pretty expensive (~23eurocent/kwh) and a desktop consuming several hundret watts over extended periods of time can be a significant hidden cost factor. Ofc this depends heavily on how much you will play games on the system (modern systems consume less power when not being used).
If i put the same filters i used above for laptops into the search for desktops i get pretty similar results, which fits my theory that desktops are only cheaper if you assemble them yourself. If you assemble the system yourself you can get more performance for the same budget, though i'm not sure if you can get a much lower entry budget. I.e. you might still have to spend 700+ but get a faster system than you'd get with a 700 laptop. As a rule of thumb any graphics-card that is released around the same time as a game (up to a year before-ish?) will be able to run the game at a decent framerate/quality. If you buy a medium-budget card it'll probably run games for the next 5 years, even if you have to reduce some details on the newest games the older the card gets. For most first person games like assasins creed the graphics card is also the main limiting factor, and on a desktop it can be easily upgrade if after a few years you want more power. The CPU is more difficult to upgrade, as often old mainboards won't support new CPUs, so if you're on a budget but plan to use the system for a long time you should still aim for a good CPU, because it will most likely be the one thing you don't upgrade (HDD/SDD/RAM/GPU are all trivial to upgrade).je11693 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 21, 2018 4:53 pm Would it be cheaper and better to go for a desktop instead of a laptop? I already have an unused Asus monitor which is quite good. Regarding other games, I presume these systems would be able to handle cross platform games that have been released on consoles and PC eg Assassins Creed, as well as PC only games like Factorio, Civilisation VI, etc?
@Ultra-budget:
Hm, they say the processor is slower than an i3 (and comparing pure GHZ numbers is not really useful for comparing performance), which means it is surely still fine for "normal" games, but factorio has an unusually high CPU demand, so that thing might not be able to run mega-factories (small/medium/large ones will be fine).
[Disclaimer: I don't know much about AMD so i have to go by what that page says.]
Also personally i find 8GB of ram in this day and age to be pretty edgy. Sure, if you only play games on the thing, and close your browser before you start a demanding game (i.e. the newest Assasins Creed) then it'll be enough. But personally i wouldn't want to go below 16G because i don't like closing all the various apps i have in background all the time, and modern Windowses also utilize "empty" RAM to cache disk access, so it's not wasted while not gaming. But ofc this can be upgraded later.
[Disclaimer: My system has 32G and i use many RAM intensive programs so i have a heavily biased opinion on this. It would be useful to hear from somebody who actually uses an 8G system as their main system.]
It does nicely highlight one great benefit of desktops though: You can buy the basic system without a dedicated GPU now (for factorio built-in gpu should be enough), and if you later decide you do want faster graphics you can just add one (if you want to play the newest Assasins Creed or something).