 Hey guys, Thundee here and welcome to my AMD 3300X $600 gaming PC bill. Now, this is a great way to build a PC or your dreams where I'll spend a lot of money but before we go ahead and do that, don't forget to enter into our giveaway. We're giving away three iPhone SEs on the channel. So use the link down below in the description to enter so you've got a few more days to do this and you enter to win. But anyway, without wasting any more time, let's start some building. So AMD reached out and said, hey look, we are releasing a brand new processor and actually two of them. We're talking about the AMD 3300X and the 3300X. These are Ryzen 3 processors, third generation Ryzen, and these are similar to the like a QI3 and a low-end QI5 in terms of just comparability. They're both four core processors, of course, 65 watts. Now they both come with the Rates Stealth CPU cooler, but I will send this from AMD so I didn't get the cooler itself, but that's letting you know that's the case. Now the difference here is the 3199 bucks, the 3300 which we'll be using in this video is 129. That should give you better balance in terms of bottlenecks when you're thinking of improving to your graphics card down the line. Now next up what we definitely need is storage. Now this is where you can actually manipulate the pricing of this build. So we went with a Samsung storage kit here which is basically about, it does about five to six hundred megabits per second and this NVMe here is priced at $69. You can go with something a little bit cheaper from AData which is about $49 and the cheaper version is out there, but I like to use the NVMe because my motherboard supports it and it has better read and write speeds. You can go a little bit higher with the 970 EVO which is about $99 for again 256, but I'm using 256 gigabytes of storage in this build. Now my RAM is from Kingston and that is the Kingston Fury, it's a 16 gigabyte module. You can of course get a dual SIM module if you want to, but that's what I had around here since of course we're in the lockdown and hopefully you guys are staying safe. And it's also cost effective, I think it's about $69 or so. Now my graphics card is the XFX 5500 XT. This is the low end new radio graphics card and this retails for I believe $199 I believe or so. You can go with something cheaper, but I want to go with current hardware from AMD on this one. Now my motherboard is the Gigabyte B450M series motherboard. Now this is a micro ATX board and this board is really solid support. It's got built in graphics if you need that. This supports AM4. Now you do, one thing to mention with this brand new chips from AMD, they all support PCIe 4.0. Now this board does not, but the new B550 series does and it wasn't available yet for this build. So I want to be 450 again. This is also really relatively cheap motherboard around $72 or so. So the pricing there again is low. Now finally we run anything up with the Cooler Master case. This is the Cooler Master Q300L I believe. Micro ATX case. It's a nice simple case. You've got of course mesh around for filtering dust. It's got a nice space for your power supply and the power supply we're using here is a Thermaltake 500W power supply. This is not a modular power supply but since we're not doing too much this should be fine with our build. So let's go ahead and start building this thing. Now the very first thing you want to do is install your storage. It's pretty easy with the NVMe. You just basically screw it in. Boom. You're good to go. Next up of course you want to put in your RAM. That's also pretty easy as well. Slide into one of the RAM slots and then you are good to go. Now next up we're putting it on a CPU. We're using the 3300X CPU in there. Boom. In place. It's good to go. On top of that we're going to now put in our Wraith cooler. This is the Wraith Max. I have that in-house here but of course it comes with Wraith Stealth so you don't have to buy a cooling solution but we'll see what temperatures land with this build. Once you put that on there you are good to go to mount this into your case and in the case of course that's our cooler master case. Everything is on our Gigabyte board and we're going to go ahead and attach that and put that into our case. Snap fingers. Boom. There it is. So we have that in our build. We're ready to go. Then we're adding of course our graphics card and then putting our power supply to connect everything through and we finally have our build. Now you guys have seen a lot of build videos which is why I'm kind of just kind of breezing past this because I want to get into what this brand new processor brings to the table. So what does it do benchmark wise? So we went and did a Cinebench 20 test on this and surprisingly this came slightly behind a Core i7-7700X. So this is closer to a Core i7 than a Core i5 or even a Core i3 for that matter. So this is actually truly impressive for the kind of price point you're getting and the performance you're doing with this. Again this is paired with the XFX5500XT so you're looking at a budget device that really pairs quite well. Now when it comes to gaming performance and sitting down playing games that's what we really care about with this in the first place. How this is actually handled. So we look at our games like Tomb Raider for instance, Shadow of the Tomb Raider doing of course the inbuilt benchmark test there. We see it very left and right from about low 50s all the way to about 90 frames per second all at 1080p. High settings on the game and finally look at the final answers. We see our average FPS is 53 frames per second at high which is good. So it means we can play this game well and it loads and runs pretty well. Now of course you know I've been playing a lot of Call of Duty Warzone and a lot of people play Warzone. So this is a machine that definitely should be able to get me into Warzone and how it doesn't handle with that game. So in gameplay sessions I'm looking at what we're doing here especially playing at high settings for the game. You can see that this runs between 50s and high 50s all the way to about high 80s in terms of frame rates. I'll say the average frame rate is about 69 maybe 68 frames per second and that is really solid for playing 1080p of this game. High settings are trying to get this best graphical fidelity as possible. I think this is the kind of build that a lot of people would like to see and start doing because you can you can customize where your price range wants to go. So for instance you don't have to use an NVMe you can use traditional SSD which is cheaper. You can even go down to 8 gigabytes of RAM and you can go with an older graphics card say maybe something an R570 or something like that something that you know costs a little bit less that you can actually pay more for or even a GTX 1650 you know something like that. So there are a lot of ways to go cheap on this. I just went with the whole AMD build on this and I can tell you you can definitely spend less than $600 building a really solid system especially if you already have some of the parts as well to use. So if you have any questions any comments let me know don't forget to like, share and subscribe definitely enter into our giveaway we're giving away three iPhone SE's use the link down below to do that and if you want to also customize and build your own PC we'll have the links for you as well. This is Thundie E saying thank you and always enjoy your entertainment.