Asumming you can do some poking around and basic research/question-asking, purchase the parts yourself, screw the darn thing together and save yourself money. Almost always, you can build a PC for cheaper than a company, with the exception of dells cheapo PCs. I spent $740.00 on my computer and about $700.00 on the speakers for it.
DIY speakers... DIY comp... Either way you look at it, your taking one thing out of the cost, and that is labor. And, FFS, buy/build a decent router if you already havent.
AF wrote:60% of a PCs cost is a company ripping you off. The best PCs money can buy are made from parts as it is, and motherboard jumpers are the most complicated part (usually they dont need changing at all and have 2-3 pages of a manual with pictures to help). Its simply a plug in and screw affair.
My PC was £800, the equivilant PC prebuilt by a company is several thousand more, preloaded with allsorts of rubbish sftware, has 10-20GB of hardrive space locked in a hidden partition, doesnt come with a bootable windows CD, and usually has an uncertain mix of hardware.
QFT.. Hmm, suprisingly I agree with everthing AF has stated.
Relative wrote:Lolz.

When one video card could consume over 200W-300W? I'm sorry, but I would like to keep my components stable.
Lets not also forget things such as multiple hard drives in RAID in addition to the high-output waffle iron video card.