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回報翻譯問題
Find a good shop that can build it for you.
Pre-builts are often filled with low quality garbage.
Just like a certain brand name that sells so called gaming desktop computers. But the computer only has a single stick of RAM. It's either that or they end up skimping out on the power supply by using an off the wall brand name.
The absolutely most important piece of hardware inside of the desktop PC is the power supply. After all it's essentially the life blood of the computer you need it to be reliable and stable. While also being able to handle any micro spikes in power usage that can happen.
If you are a gamer building desktop computer is flat out the way to go. However if you are flat out set you don't want to build one. Then getting an gaming laptop with best specs you can afford is the way to go.
This right here. Being unfamiliar with the components will get taken advantage of by some unscrupulous seller of prebuilts or PC builder. It's okay to buy a prebuilt or have someone build for you, but you should know what it is you're buying at the component level or you're just asking to be taken for a ride.
Pre-built OEMs usually make cuts for the sake of profit when it comes to motherboards, cooling, power supply, etc. which always ends up biting the consumer at some point, usually only being noticed by those that know where to look or when a cheap component outright dies on them.
https://www.microcenter.com/site/stores/default.aspx
you can pick parts, they will assemble for around $100 over parts costs
or their prebuilds are good too
https://www.microcenter.com/site/products/gaming_desktops.aspx
Not most of the ones below 1200-1500 or so and not brands like Dell, HP, Lenovo.
If want good laptops look at SAGER or Frameworks
I'd, however, suggest that you look into building your own, it's quite an experience, even though I'm >60, my last build was almost two years ago, from spare parts I had lying around after some upgrades (even had a spare 1500W PSU, an old SOLDAM XR-1 Black Knight case, a spare RX 6900XT - after upgrading to an RX 7900XTX, an R9 5900X after upgrading main rig to a 5700X3D,etc).
I'd only needed to snag a new yet cheap cooler TR Peerless Assassin 120 SE, some NVMe M.2 SSD for both rigs...it didn't cost me much to build my 2nd rig. So, having the knowledge and skill to build your own gaming rigs can prove to be very useful in the long run. Sure, you might come across an issue or two that handily hands you your butt, but hey, that's part of the journey. There's plenty of PC building guilds on YT, so you can always watch them to glean some knowledge.
$750
https://www.microcenter.com/product/676226/powerspec-g517-gaming-pc
5800x3d
a little skimpy on the board, but good enough
ASRock B550M-C/AC, maybe 6+1+1, heatsinks on all for the cpu cores, so around 150w to cores
16g 3200 ram
rx 7600
500g ssd
building it yourself only saves around $30
https://pcpartpicker.com/list/JHJXTY
you do wanna build. you do not want to do cable management.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLLRqaVUKz4
get a nice open workspace, cable management optional
edit: nevermind that was the most pain in the ass case i ever seen. just get something huge you can fit your arms in.