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Fordítási probléma jelentése
The 2600 is more then capable enough of running any GPU. Get a XX60 GPU if you can afford it. The 60 series will do really well in 1080p high settings gamings.
Those PSUs are all cheap crap, I don't recommend any of them. Get a Corsair CX 550m or better.
1650 4gb vram is looking quite short these days, so go for a 1660 super or the 1660ti, great cards for 1080p gaming.. And one thing since when is the 1660ti too much for a ryzen 2600??? It can even be paired quite well with a rtx 2070/2070s...
As for power supply check the options from seasonic, it's a very reputable brand with great products. I honestly don't know any of those brands and when it comes to power supplies it's always better to get one from a reputable brand, corsair also has some good options.
There's a thread on linus tech forum with a great list about psu tiers, check that out before buying one.
I don't have better PSUs near.
1. For the motherboard, I recommend either a Gigabyte B450M-DS3H or ASRock B450M Pro4. Whatever's cheaper between the two. A320 motherboards are trash, avoid them at all costs because it will hold you back. PRIME boards are also really cheap and not worth the price compared to others like the ones I mentioned.
2. Make sure you pick at least 3000 MHz RAM. CPUs these days benefit greatly from RAM up to 3200 MHz in gaming.
3. 1660 Ti is not too much for the 2600, it can still handle a 1080 Ti or 2080, just not to the same degree as newer CPUs like the 3600 or 9700K.
Even so, the RX 570 is a lot better than the 1650, and cheaper. There's no reason to buy a 1650, nor should it even exist. (1660 shouldn't even exist either because it's only slightly better than a used 1060 6G or RX 580 8G)
4. FSP is the most reliable brand of the 3.
There is no actual maximum GPU for any given CPU. The 2600 can still get high FPS with a powerful GPU like a 2080-Super, just not as much as the 3600 or 9700K, but nobody actually needs every single point.
Lower screen resolutions like 1280*1024 yield higher CPU load because the GPU has a weaker workload to deal with, so it pushes the CPU for a higher framerate. No matter what GPU you pick, your resolution becomes a type of bottleneck because your CPU is going to be pushed harder than it would be at 1920*1080.
I don't know where you live but like notkennyS said, you can order online, you must have access to amazon or newegg. That way you have plenty of options to choose from.
If you do want to get the 1650 I recommend the AMD RX 570 over it, it's cheaper and much faster.
SAPPHIRE AMD Radeon RX 5700 PULSE, 8Gb, GDDR6 - 430$
but
1650 - 181$,
1660 - 259$,
1660 - 309$
Not the 5700, the 570.
5700 is a new Navi card, 570 is old GCN and closer to the 1650 in performance, but cheaper in almost every country in the world.
So same price, but:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wxOaJAGhrxY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zLbetB7Tzo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHALv7fpb54
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3KKGZQRUiM
Almost always, there's higher FPS with the 570 for the same price. It's just that the one downside is that GCN was always power hungry; the 570 uses just as much power as the twice as powerful RX 5700 and GTX 1080. (In actual power draw on average while gaming; TDP rating doesn't mean ♥♥♥♥ to actual power draw. AMD bases TDP off of temperatures, while NVIDIA more or less bases it off of average draw.)
The 1650 only recommends a 300W PSU in most cases, whereas you want a 500W PSU minimum for the 570. That's not to say that you should get a cheaper PSU, because you should NEVER cheap out on a PSU as it's responsible for supplying electricity safely, and a lot of dirt cheap units can fail and cause damage to components.