this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2024
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Gaming
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I feel like the end goal has always been the incentive for me. I learned to build a PC because, if I wanted to play the games I wanted, there wasn't another option. I still do always enjoy the process of putting it all together, but I'm always ready to have it all working, booted, and put to use (if not just so I can be relieved that I don't need to RMA anything, hah).
If the end goal isn't something that interests you, then maybe it's just not worth doing it.
Hmm, yeah, I get what you're saying. I guess for me, I don't feel like I have a ton of time to actually sit down and learn stuff, so any way I can make it more fun or give myself some kind of incentive to learn helps.
I know I want to get the end result, but it's just a matter of tricking my stupid monkey brain into thinking it's just fun games when I'm learning lol. It prevents me from getting bored long enough for me to dig in and get interested
Honestly, it's just a matter of knowing this list:
And roughly how they should fit together.
But every time I build a PC I have to figure out what the latest versions of these parts are, make sure they're compatible, and when I get the parts they might have some unique form factor I have to figure out on the fly. Just going to PC Part Picker and picking out each part is 90% of the way there. After that it's just a matter of getting them, sticking them together, crossing your fingers that it powers on, and installing an OS. If/when it doesn't power on, THAT'S when you start learning...
But I would say building a PC is not a fraction as difficult as say, knowing how to work on a car.