this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2024
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I haven't run on integrated graphics in forever, so I was worried it might have awful performance, especially considering it's Intel
But it looks like things should be able to run at 720p at a reasonable framerate
https://artofpc.com/review/intel-uhd-770/
If you do decide to add a GPU later, you may want to consider upgrading the power supply at the same time. The rule of thumb I use is that the power supply should supply double the power that the machine is supposed to consume (Which you've already done here for the current build)
IGPU is fine for basic office work and normal web browsing. I use the IGPU on my 8th gen Mac mini just fine.
Plus if op gets a tame video card 600 watts is enough. The i5 isn’t as power hungry as the 200+ watt i7 and i9s
Just commented about popping out my useless SLI and throwing one of my useless 1080s into this build
Also you think the integrated graphics would be fine for a 32in/large 4k monitor?
If it's not for gaming or video editing/compression, the igpu will be plenty. That's what those are for.
If any 3d gaming is going to happen, you can add the gpu in, but that's an easy drop-in upgrade anyway. You can just stick it in there at a later time if you want.
If you switch to AMD G-series, the iGPUs are much more capable than their contemporary Intel counterparts. I did gaming solely on a 5600G while I waited for GPU prices to drop, and I was able to play the entire BioShock series, Halo Infinite, Prey, Savage Planet, and several others on medium settings, getting 45-55fps @ 1080p (32GB, DDR4 3666 C16).
I don't know about 4K, but I would think it's in the realm of possibility for a non-gaming target.
If my 8th gen Mac mini handles it just fine a 14th gen i5 will handle it just fine. My laptop has the same GPU and I can play a surprising amount of games pretty well on it.
The gtx 1080 would be overkill for just one monitor. Unless you're doing 3+ displays with lots of video skip the dedicated GPU and save the power.