(08-05-2018, 03:41 PM)JonnyH Wrote: Be aware that for 'future proofing' - depending on how long you want things to last - it may be cheaper in the long run to buy a relatively midrange system with the expectation it'll be updated later - as the march of technology waits for no man, and you may end up with a faster system on average over the equivalent expected lifetime of a crazy high-end system. Certainly recently in CPUs (now there's actually some competitionan 8th gen i3 can give the highest-end most expensive i7 from just a couple of years back a run for it's money.
This is especially when looking at top-tier 'halo' products - as the price increases a lot for a relatively modest improvement in performance.
I think from a VR perspective, being cheap usually results in a dramatic decrease in performance. I have pretty high-end pc parts, but I am having to update even further for stable fps rate.
I think for me, having a perfect VR-capable machine (from a dolphin perspective) provides me with enough of a future proof pc without having to sacrifice anything on any AAA quality game.
[color=#000000]Windows 10 x64 | Intel® Core i5-7600K CPU @ 3.80GHz | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 | 16 GBs DDR4 Ram | Dolphin 5.0/VR 250/FM 2.9F[/color]

an 8th gen i3 can give the highest-end most expensive i7 from just a couple of years back a run for it's money.