| ▲ | Aurornis 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||
Future proofing is an expensive way to pay for features you don't need and will probably never use. It's smarter to buy a cheap motherboard that meets your needs now. If in the future you find the need for USB4 or some other feature, upgrade the motherboard. More often than not, builders will try to future proof for eventualities that don't arrive before it's time to upgrade to the next CPU socket anyway. There are a lot of people with expensive, outdated "futureproofed" builds who would have been better off saving the money on the original purchase so they could upgrade sooner instead. | ||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | the__alchemist 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||
It's a gamble. I take the opposite mindset now; scarcity mindset. "$1600 is too much for a video card" - me a few years ago on not buying an RTX4090 from nvidia's website. "I only need 32Gb of RAM. If I want more later, I'll just updgrade" - Me a year ago. Both mistakes, with hindsight. I will always future proof from here on out. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | ryukoposting 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||
This. In 2017 I bought the cheapest AM4 motherboard with a USB-C port (a Gigabyte X370 Aorus Word Salad). I'm still using it because BIOS updates gave it Zen 3 support. Wanna guess how many times I've used that USB-C port? Maybe once or twice in the 9 years I've owned it. Never needed it. I also couldn't tell you what X370 is getting me that B350 wouldn't have gotten me. | ||||||||||||||||||||