Build a PC on Any Budget: Three Builds from $500 to $2000
The Sweet Spot PC
This rig is just right for most people’s budgets, offers just the right amount of performance, and just the right acoustics, too

Heatsink
Cooler Master’s Hyper 212 Evo continues to offer the best cooling at a price that doesn’t break the bank, or the ears, and lets us maintain our 4GHz overclock in peace and quiet.
CPU
On Valentine’s Day we sent flowers and chocolate to Intel’s 3.3GHz Core i5-2500K. Yes, we love it that much for giving us so much joy and happiness for so little money. We took the chip from its stock 3.3GHz to a very moderate overclock of 4GHz to keep within our plan for a fast and quiet PC.
Motherboard
News flash: You can get a cheap LGA1155 board, but you can’t get a cheap board that supports SLI and CrossFireX. Gigabyte’s GA-Z68XP-UD3 is about the lowest-cost board around that still gives us the capability to run SLI or CrossFireX while offering all of the Z68-goodness such as QuickSync and SSD caching.
GPU
EVGA’s GeForce GTX 560 Ti 448 is perhaps the best bang for the buck right now without leaping beyond $300 for a GPU. Ours, for example, can be found on sale or with rebates for $269. Don’t confuse it with the FTW or Classified editions, which fetch a bit more.
PSU
Corsair’s TX750M gives us enough juice to support a second GPU in the future, and with rebates it’s a darn good deal.
RAM
A pair of 4GB Patriot DDR3/1600 DIMMs hits the price/performance ratio for us and is low‑profile enough to fit under the cooler.
SSD
What’s not to love about the OCZ Agility 3 drive? It packs 120GB of MLC NAND, has a SandForce 2 controller, and can be found for a mere $130 after rebates.
HDD
With the OS running off of our speedy SSD, we fell back on an affordable and quiet 2TB WD Caviar Green drive for storage duties.
Case
It used to be that $99 got you a razor blade shaped like a case, but Fractal Design’s R3 (on sale from $109) is simply an amazingly well-designed, elegant case that’s quiet as hell.
OS
For this config, we’re going to save $30 by buying 64-bit Windows 7 Home Premium, but anyone who expects to run more than 16GB should buy Windows 7 Professional instead.

Keep reading for the Tax Refund PC and the benchmarks!