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Anywhere really. Also, the price was with an assumption that you have some quite high grade Z270 motherboard.
Cpu: 200
Ram: 150
motherboard: 100 (if it's a good Z270)
might do that
i have a asus prime b250 plus at the moment.
In that case, it would be 400$, especially when selling separately.
With your 7700k/gtx1080/16GB you should be in no rush to swap.
Ps, 2019 is only 6 months away.
Buy what? Your Motherboard should ship with the latest BIOS by default.
If not you ship it back and request the retailer update the dam thing.
It is their responsibility, as a re-seller to ensure that.
Best bet really is since all boards below X470 requires BIOS update for Ryzen 2xxx CPUs, and you are getting that type of combo; like say a B350 Motherboard + any Ryzen 2xxx CPU, then you should be requesting the Motherboard get updated prior to shipping, you can place your order, lets say Newegg, once they have taken the first step to fulfill your order, you can call them and request that your Motherboard get the latest bios update and also be pre-tested, prior to shipping.
Well, it comes down to the store. Different stores handle things differently. Some do it for free, some you have to actually pay for that service.
So yeah, best bet is to ask the store how they handle BIOS updating.
Now sure, they won't just look at an Order and say "Oh, the customer is ordering this MB and this CPU, we should update the BIOS to ensure compatibility" ~ Of course not because who is say those two items were even ordered to go together when you're not ordering say, a complete system perhaps. But again you can usually go ahead and place your order, then once the order is placed and entered it's starting process of actually being fulfilled, but has not reached the shipping prep-process yet, you can usually call and request that they pre-test and even update the Motherboard BIOS if needed. Some models I have ordered, such as MSI B350M Mortar, as of May already came pre-updated from MSI directly to help ensure compatibility.
However many B350/X370 boards may not be, so in short, you have no way of knowing this until its in your hands. And if that Board and CPU is all you have for that socket/platform, well you can't get that board to boot with a Ryzen 2xxx series CPU unless you perhaps have done like I already suggested; or have a Ryzen 1xxx series CPU to initially boot and update bios with; or you can request the AMD Ryzen Boot Kit directly from AMD, in which they ship you out a Ryzen 1xxx series CPU to allow you to update your Motherboard BIOS in order to use your Ryzen 2xxx CPU. But also keep in mind you have to be careful and not damage their sent out kit if you go this route, and that you must return it to AMD when you are finished with it, and in a timely fashion as well.
Right now they are fairly neck-and-neck. But all Ryzen platform thus far have a brick wall with OC'ing. Where as with say 7700K, it's not that hard or unrealistic to bump this up well beyond the 4.6Ghz range by Overclocking it and ensure Thermals are under control.
Already have a decent Motherboard and RAM? Good, now ensure the CPU and Case Cooling is more than you would basically ever need, then OC that CPU as far as it will go, while remaining stable across all major CPU Stress Tests. If your PSU is perhaps questionable; then run CPU & GPU stress tests together to put a heavy stress on that PSU, then ensure all 3 of these major components can handle following-through with such stress testing.