$2,000 Gaming PC BuildNVIDIA GPU

Complete component list with live prices - updated daily

$1,724.97

Estimated total

Why This Build

This gaming build pairs the AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D with a NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti for strong 1440p and 4K gaming. At this price point, you get DDR5 memory and PCIe 5.0 support, a quality PSU with room to spare, and a case with proper airflow. This is the tier where you stop making compromises on individual components.

Components

Performance Summary

CPU Score

98/100

GPU Score

72/100

Total TDP

300W

GPU Bottleneck ~23%at 1440p

At 1440p (Quad HD), the NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti is creating a ~23% bottleneck for the AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D. At 1440p resolution, the GPU workload is significantly higher, and your graphics card is the limiting factor. Upgrading your GPU would provide the biggest performance improvement at this resolution.

View full bottleneck analysis →

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Frequently Asked Questions

Why did you pick the AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D for this build?

The AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D has a gaming score of 98/100 and costs $349.98. At the $2,000 price point, it provides the best balance of gaming performance without overspending on the CPU at the expense of the GPU. It is a strong match for the NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti at this budget.

Can this build handle 1440p gaming?

It can handle 1440p in less demanding titles and esports games, but you may need to lower settings in AAA titles to maintain 60 FPS. This build is optimized for strong 1080p performance.

What should I upgrade first on this build?

The GPU is where you will see the biggest gains when upgrading. The AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D has plenty of headroom to drive a faster GPU. When GPU prices come down or next-gen cards launch, a GPU swap is the easiest way to boost performance on this build.

Is 850W 80+ Gold enough power for this build?

Yes. The AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D (120W TDP) and NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti (180W TDP) draw approximately 300W combined under load. The 850W 80+ Gold provides comfortable headroom for peak power spikes and ensures stable, efficient operation. We always recommend at least 25% headroom above your system's total draw.