So my eight-year-old wants a desktop PC. He’s kind of a budding gamer, but right now, he almost exclusively plays Roblox on his iPad and will definitely carry this over to the PC. As he gets older, he may want to graduate to more demanding titles. On the other hand, he may also get bored with it and stick with consoles and mobile gaming.

I don’t want to spend a ton on a PC for a very young child who may not take to PC gaming seriously, but I also want to get something that might be upgradeable as he grows if he wants to join the PC master race.

In my research, I came across this.

The recommendation I saw in PCMag that led me to the PC above suggested that the integrated graphics with the Ryzen 5 5600G could serve as a starting point for low level gaming and allow me to spend on a GPU card later if it’s justified. The price and functionality appear to offer exactly the path I want.

I’ve seen other, more expensive versions of this pre-built, and I’ve also looked at the possibility of building it myself. I like this particular chip because it’s only a generation or so back and it still appears to be well-regarded by the community. If I went with one of the cheap old workstation conversions, I’d be limited by proprietary hardware and fewer options–a lot of the stuff out there, especially Intel stuff, is very old and won’t be able to run Windows 11 when it becomes necessary. What I’m finding suggests this path could see us through quite a few years to come and allow us to upgrade as needed.

Am I barking up the wrong tree here, or does this seem like it could work the way I want?

UPDATE: I’ve decided to buy the pre built deal I found with the 6500G. I would like to go to a fancier build, but the price of the AM5 chips and motherboards takes them off of the table for me right now. I think what I’m getting will be good enough as some of you have said.

Thanks to everyone for your help! If y’all are interested, I’ll post an update when I get it.

  • slingstone@lemmy.worldOP
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    4 months ago

    Would I be better buying one of these xeon or other older intel conversions with an old workstation super cheap and waiting for AM5 socket processors to get cheaper? If I’m going to be looking for a new CPU anyway, and AM4 AND LGA 1700 are both reaching the end of their cycles, I’m tempted to buy something that’s just good enough now and get a whole new PC with a viable upgrade path when prices come down.

    Throwing this in: my wife wants something to double for general home use, but I can’t imagine we’d run anything more serious than Office for that purpose.

    Thoughts?

    • inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      4 months ago

      I’m not a fan of using an old Xeon processor as a gaming processor personally as the single threaded performance, which unfortunately most games still are, is pretty darn bad. But that’s just me and I know they’re ultra cheap, I know I can get a used one old ass server for like a hundred bucks at my local computer shop but still I’d have reservations all things considered since it’s an old server, you know it’s been on a long, long time with minimal upkeep.

      Both AM4 and LGA 1700 are at the end of life, not reaching it since AMD announced that the latest X3D’s they launched are the last for AM4 and Intel has also announced that the 15th Gen are moving to a new socket I’m pretty darn sure, so with that said I think if you’re looking for “good enough” then the 5600G good enough for Roblox and light office work but that’s just me.

      It doesn’t seem like you’ll get a lot of opinions here unfortunately so you might want to ask another community or hit up buildapc on reddit, yes I know blasphemy.

      Good luck.