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I can suggest some guidelines if WoW is your primary concern. CPU: I don't think you can go wrong here anymore. Any modern CPU should be able to handle WoW. I remember ten years ago that I was able to run at least 3 instances of the game before hitting any problems. Storage: This might be the most important factor. The biggest performance gains I've seen with this game is when run it from a faster disk. Going from a regular Hard Disk to an SSD was incredibly massive. Keeping that in mind, I'd also say that I'd recommend not just an SSD but the fastest one you can afford. I think the ones that connect directly to PCIE are the faster than going through a SATA controller. I would quit the game permanently if I had to go back to the loading times on hard disk. Video: I haven't looked at video cards in the last six months so I can't be super specific. Traditionally you'd want to shoot for at least the upper models in the mid-tier. Like a 1060 level or higher. I'd also add that at this level of cards I'd say get the card with the most RAM but slightly slower GPU over a slightly faster GPU with less RAM. I hope that makes sense. Skimping on the video RAM can cause a bottleneck and prevent you from getting any benefit from slightly faster GPU. Anyway, this is only in regards to World of Warcraft. It's rather unique in this way compared to most games. I hope this was helpful at all.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.ASUS ROG is the best gamer PC on the market. rivals alienware i have two laptops and can switch back and forth with no issues. Amazon sells them. just pick the stuff you want,ram,graphics card etc and pick your budget.
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