If you are on a budget, I have a rule that you should follow..
ALWAYS overclock, unless you can afford to pay for the performance you want!
Being a long time AMD fanboy always getting AMD cpu's, I'll tell you that going Intel is really the only worthwhile thing to do these days, AMD cpu's are simply just subpar sadly for most things. Intel might cost a tiny tiny bit more, but they also are easier to cool, overclock and perform generally better.
However, right now the only choice for GPU's you have are the new R7 or R9 series from AMD as nothing else comes close in performance to price ratio. Not sure if they're released anywhere near you guys, I know there's at least a month or so before they come to Denmark.. (sadface)
So, your choices are:
1) Buy a good medium-high end CPU 2500k/3570k/4670k (if the prices you can find are almost the same, just go for the newest, though the 2500k has the least cooling issues, and personally I use the 3570k at a solid 5GHz) along with a decent motherboard and then buy a really cheap GPU and use that until you can afford something better.
option #2) Buy a meh CPU and then dump all your money on a GPU, giving you better performance "RIGHT NOW" but leaving you with alot more to replace in 2-3 years time.
Where do you order your parts from guys? I'll throw something together so you only need to buy a GPU later on (it will still play ArmA 3 until then though)
:edit: fun fact
You don't need to buy 2400 MHz ram for gaming, nor really anything else
If you can get low voltage (aka 1.3 volts) 1333 CL7/8/9 ram, then that is automatically better than 1.5/1.65volts 2400 CL10/11, ram matters almost nothing in gaming, and for rendering/rar'ing, ram isn't where you would put your money anyways. TL;DR - 1333 MHz is good and cheap
:edit:
This is really only if you have lots of spare time and you're willing to work alot more with your computer, and feel comfortable with water around it.
As a water cooling enthusiast I can only recommend you go custom loop, the money you save by going custom, getting a single or several radiators is worth it in the end, you only need to replace your pump when it dies in 3-10 years time and largely depends on the quality you buy too (water you can replace every year or less if you feel like it).
Every purchase after you have water, nets you free extra % performance through the extra overclocking and if you're not overclocking you at least get a less noisy system with a better longevity and you can base your system around that. A single 240 rad will passively cool most parts if you aren't overclocking, so in effect you have an inaudible system. Water blocks for GPU's are relatively cheap considering what they give you and that you can always pop the stock cooler back on and resell, or sell it with the block on to other people that want something water. (Though I don't remember what brands allow custom coolers anymore on their GPU's, I think EVGA or XFX)
ALWAYS overclock, unless you can afford to pay for the performance you want!
Being a long time AMD fanboy always getting AMD cpu's, I'll tell you that going Intel is really the only worthwhile thing to do these days, AMD cpu's are simply just subpar sadly for most things. Intel might cost a tiny tiny bit more, but they also are easier to cool, overclock and perform generally better.
However, right now the only choice for GPU's you have are the new R7 or R9 series from AMD as nothing else comes close in performance to price ratio. Not sure if they're released anywhere near you guys, I know there's at least a month or so before they come to Denmark.. (sadface)
So, your choices are:
1) Buy a good medium-high end CPU 2500k/3570k/4670k (if the prices you can find are almost the same, just go for the newest, though the 2500k has the least cooling issues, and personally I use the 3570k at a solid 5GHz) along with a decent motherboard and then buy a really cheap GPU and use that until you can afford something better.
option #2) Buy a meh CPU and then dump all your money on a GPU, giving you better performance "RIGHT NOW" but leaving you with alot more to replace in 2-3 years time.
Where do you order your parts from guys? I'll throw something together so you only need to buy a GPU later on (it will still play ArmA 3 until then though)
:edit: fun fact
You don't need to buy 2400 MHz ram for gaming, nor really anything else
If you can get low voltage (aka 1.3 volts) 1333 CL7/8/9 ram, then that is automatically better than 1.5/1.65volts 2400 CL10/11, ram matters almost nothing in gaming, and for rendering/rar'ing, ram isn't where you would put your money anyways. TL;DR - 1333 MHz is good and cheap
:edit:
This is really only if you have lots of spare time and you're willing to work alot more with your computer, and feel comfortable with water around it.
As a water cooling enthusiast I can only recommend you go custom loop, the money you save by going custom, getting a single or several radiators is worth it in the end, you only need to replace your pump when it dies in 3-10 years time and largely depends on the quality you buy too (water you can replace every year or less if you feel like it).
Every purchase after you have water, nets you free extra % performance through the extra overclocking and if you're not overclocking you at least get a less noisy system with a better longevity and you can base your system around that. A single 240 rad will passively cool most parts if you aren't overclocking, so in effect you have an inaudible system. Water blocks for GPU's are relatively cheap considering what they give you and that you can always pop the stock cooler back on and resell, or sell it with the block on to other people that want something water. (Though I don't remember what brands allow custom coolers anymore on their GPU's, I think EVGA or XFX)