Building a gaming PC under $1,000 in 2026 is genuinely achievable with strong performance. This build targets 1080p high-settings gaming and 1440p medium-settings gaming. The component choices balance: performance, future upgrade paths, and quality.
Complete Parts List ($998 Total)
Component
Specific Choice
Price
CPU
AMD Ryzen 5 7600
$179
Motherboard
MSI B650 Tomahawk WiFi
$179
RAM
G.Skill Trident Z5 32GB (2×16GB) 6000
$129
GPU
RX 7600 XT or RTX 4060
$279
Storage
Crucial P3 Plus 1TB NVMe
$79
PSU
EVGA SuperNOVA 750 G6
$109
Case
NZXT H5 Flow
$99
CPU Cooler
Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE
$45
Total
$1,098
Cost-saving options to reach $1,000:
Reduce RAM to 16GB ($79 saves $50): Use Crucial Pro DDR5 16GB
Choose Crucial P3 Plus 500GB ($45 saves $34): Less storage but full speed
500W PSU ($80 saves $29): Sufficient for these specs
Adjusted build totals ~$985.
Performance Expectations
1080p Gaming (Most Common)
Ultra/High settings, 100+ FPS in:
Cyberpunk 2077
Call of Duty Warzone
Fortnite (high settings, 200+ FPS)
Valorant (300+ FPS)
League of Legends (300+ FPS)
Counter-Strike 2 (250+ FPS)
Medium settings:
Most demanding 2025-2026 AAA titles
1440p Gaming
High settings, 60+ FPS:
Most current AAA titles
Esports titles at high refresh rate
4K Gaming
Not recommended for this build. The GPU isn't strong enough for comfortable 4K gaming. Use the saved money on a 1440p monitor instead of going to 4K.
Why These Components
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 7600 ($179)
The Ryzen 5 7600 (non-X version) provides excellent gaming performance at half the price of premium gaming CPUs. 6 cores, 12 threads, integrated graphics for backup if GPU fails.
Why not X3D: The Ryzen 7 7800X3D ($379) offers 5-10% better gaming but doubles the CPU cost. For sub-$1,000 builds, the 7600 leaves budget for better GPU.
Motherboard: MSI B650 Tomahawk WiFi ($179)
The MSI B650 Tomahawk WiFi is the sweet spot for AM5 motherboards. AM5 socket (future-proof for 9000 series upgrades), Wi-Fi 6E included, multiple M.2 slots, USB-C.
Why B650 and not X670: X670 is overkill for typical gaming builds. The B650 has identical CPU support, less power delivery (sufficient for 105W TDP Ryzen 7 9800X3D), and saves $100+.
GPU: AMD RX 7600 XT or NVIDIA RTX 4060 ($279)
For pure gaming, RX 7600 XT is the better value at this price:
16GB VRAM (vs RTX 4060's 8GB)
Better raster performance
AMD FSR upscaling
For ray tracing or NVIDIA-specific features (DLSS), RTX 4060:
8GB VRAM (sufficient at 1080p)
DLSS upscaling (slightly better than FSR for visual quality)
Ray tracing performance (10-20% better than RX 7600 XT)
Both deliver excellent 1080p performance. Choose based on whether you prioritize VRAM (AMD) or ray tracing (NVIDIA).
RAM: G.Skill Trident Z5 32GB ($129)
32GB DDR5-6000 is the sweet spot. 16GB is increasingly limiting for modern games + Discord + browser + Windows. 32GB future-proofs the build.
6000 MT/s is optimal for AMD AM5 due to Infinity Fabric. Higher speeds provide diminishing returns.
Storage: Crucial P3 Plus 1TB NVMe ($79)
1TB is the minimum for modern gaming. Modern AAA games are 100-150GB each. 1TB fits Windows + applications + 6-8 large games.
Why P3 Plus and not premium SSD: At 1080p/1440p gaming, the speed difference between $79 P3 Plus and $179 Samsung 990 Pro is imperceptible. Save money on storage; invest in GPU.
PSU: EVGA SuperNOVA 750 G6 ($109)
750W is sufficient for this build with ample headroom. 80 Plus Gold efficiency, fully modular cables, 10-year warranty.
Why 750W: The components draw ~400W under load. 750W provides comfortable headroom and allows future GPU upgrade (RTX 4070+) without PSU replacement.
Case: NZXT H5 Flow ($99)
The H5 Flow has excellent airflow at mid-range pricing. Mesh front for cool intake, room for full-length GPU, USB-C front IO.
Why this and not premium case: Premium cases ($150-200) add aesthetic but don't significantly improve thermals over the H5 Flow. The savings goes to better components.
CPU Cooler: Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE ($45)
The Peerless Assassin is the budget cooling champion. Outperforms many $100 AIOs at $45.
Why air over AIO: Air cooling is more reliable long-term (no pump to fail). The PA 120 SE is more than adequate for Ryzen 5 7600.
Step-by-Step Assembly Guide
Step 1: Prepare Work Area
Clear flat surface with anti-static mat (or carpet to avoid static)
All components and tools within reach
Manual for motherboard open for reference
Phone for photos of orientation (helps if you forget which way components face)
Step 2: Install CPU
1. Open motherboard CPU socket (lift retention lever)
2. Match CPU triangle marker to socket triangle
3. Lower CPU gently (don't drop)
4. Close retention lever
Step 3: Install Cooler
1. Apply thermal paste (pea-sized drop in center of CPU)
2. Install mounting bracket on motherboard
3. Lower cooler onto bracket
4. Tighten screws alternately (don't fully tighten one before others)
5. Connect CPU fan header
Step 4: Install RAM
1. Identify correct slots (usually A2 and B2, marked on motherboard)
2. Push RAM into slots until clips engage with audible click
3. Both modules should look identical
Step 5: Install M.2 SSD
1. Remove M.2 slot heatsink (some motherboards)
2. Insert SSD at 30° angle, push to lock
3. Secure with screw
4. Replace heatsink with thermal pad
Step 6: Install Motherboard in Case
1. Remove case panels
2. Mount I/O shield on case (usually integrated with motherboard)
3. Mount motherboard standoffs (if not pre-installed)
4. Carefully lower motherboard onto standoffs
5. Secure with screws
Step 7: Install GPU
1. Remove case PCIe slot covers
2. Press PCIe slot retention clip
3. Insert GPU firmly into PCIe x16 slot
4. Secure with screws to case
5. Connect PCIe power cable from PSU
Step 8: Install PSU
1. Mount PSU at bottom of case (fan facing down if case has filter)
2. Connect: 24-pin to motherboard, 8-pin CPU power, PCIe to GPU, SATA power if needed
Step 9: Cable Management
1. Run cables behind motherboard tray (through case grommets)
2. Use included Velcro straps or zip ties to organize
3. Verify no cables touch fans or restrict airflow
Step 10: Connect Case Cables
1. Connect: Power switch, reset switch, LED cables (referenced in motherboard manual)
2. Connect USB-A/USB-C front IO cables
3. Connect HD audio header
Step 11: First Boot
1. Connect monitor, keyboard, mouse
2. Insert Windows USB drive
3. Power on PSU switch first, then case power button
4. Verify all fans spin, LED indicators show normal
Yes — a $1,000 budget builds a capable gaming PC for 1080p high-settings or 1440p medium-settings gaming. Component choices: Ryzen 5 7600 CPU, RX 7600 XT or RTX 4060 GPU, 32GB DDR5 RAM, 1TB NVMe SSD. Most current AAA games run at 60+ FPS with appropriate settings.
AMD RX 7600 XT or NVIDIA RTX 4060 for $1,000 build?
RX 7600 XT for: better raster performance, 16GB VRAM (vs 8GB on RTX 4060), AMD FSR upscaling, slightly cheaper. RTX 4060 for: NVIDIA DLSS (better upscaling quality), ray tracing performance, NVIDIA features. For pure performance per dollar: AMD wins. For ray tracing or DLSS-specific use: NVIDIA.
How long will a $1,000 gaming PC last?
Comfortable 1080p high-settings gaming: 4-5 years. The Ryzen 5 7600 CPU and 32GB RAM are sufficient long-term; GPU upgrades after 4-5 years extend usable life significantly. AM5 socket platform supports CPU upgrades through 2027-2028 without motherboard replacement. Total expected useful life with one GPU upgrade: 7-8 years.
A equipa editorial da VersusMatrix avalia produtos usando o nosso motor de pontuação alimentado por IA combinado com pesquisa prática sobre especificações, avaliações de utilizadores e benchmarks de especialistas. O nosso objetivo é fornecer comparações objetivas e baseadas em dados para ajudar os consumidores a tomar decisões de compra mais inteligentes.