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TechRadar
Christian Guyton

How to build a PS5 Pro PC-equivalent gaming rig

A thoughtful-looking man with a notepad and pencil surrounded by PC components.

The PS5 Pro is here, and as someone who never got around to buying the original model, I’m very excited. Wait, it costs how much? Actually, never mind, I’m going to build a new PC instead.

Yes, building a custom gaming PC has plenty of advantages over getting a home console like Sony’s latest $699.99 / £699.99 / AU$1,200 machine, and it shouldn’t cost you that much more; there’s no denying it’ll be more expensive, since consoles have the advantage of fixed-spec configurations that help cut down manufacturing costs, but the best gaming PCs (whether custom-assembled or prebuilt) can be upgraded over time, and offers limitless backward compatibility for all your favorite games.

Besides, I already own so many PC games that I need a spreadsheet to keep track of them (503 titles and counting). I’m not about to abandon all of those just so that I can pay $70 per game; sorry, Sony.

Matching the PS5 Pro

I’ve done my best to keep costs low wherever I can, and many of the prices here are pre-discount; with Black Friday looming, chances are you’ll be able to snag most of these components for less than the standard retail price.

I've only listed retailer links for the US below, as otherwise this article would become unwieldy. If you're in the UK, Australia, or elsewhere, most of these components will be readily available from Amazon or online component stores, and a quick conversion from the dollar prices listed to your local currency should give you a rough idea of what they'll cost.

While we're looking to keep costs down, there are some areas where we can’t afford to cut corners if we want to keep pace with the PS5 Pro’s newly boosted capabilities in our equivalent PC build.

Chief among these is the graphics card, and although we don’t know the exact specs of the PS5 Pro, there are some key extrapolations we can make right now. Based on Sony’s claim that the Pro’s rendering speed is “up to 45% faster” than the original PS5, we can assume that its integrated GPU is roughly equivalent to an Nvidia RTX 4060 or AMD RX 7700 XT.

There’s an important caveat here, though: PS5 games are better optimized thanks to the fixed specs of the console, meaning that despite mirroring the internal specs as closely as possible, those GPUs won’t give us the same level of performance in-game. With that in mind, I’ve upgraded to an RTX 4070, which we noted in our review was great for 4K gaming with Nvidia's DLSS upscaling tech – something Sony is currently aping with PSSR for the PS5 Pro.

The RTX 4070 is arguably the perfect graphics card: perfectly balancing pricing, performance, and a rich feature set (Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

We also can’t skimp on our processor, and since AMD makes the custom chip that powers the PS5 Pro, I’m opting for a CPU from Team Red. The chip in question is the Ryzen 7 5800X – one of the best processors for gaming without breaking the bank. Opting for a 5000-series Ryzen chip also allows us to stick with a slightly more affordable AM4 chipset motherboard.

Beyond that, I’ve settled on a healthy 16GB of RAM (the same amount of unified memory in the PS5 Pro, and generally the minimum recommended amount for running modern PC games), a mid-range X570 motherboard, and of course 2TB of high-speed SSD storage. For the power supply, case, and cooler, I’ve opted for fairly affordable, though not bargain-basement, products to keep the total price down.

PS5 Pro PC equivalent: The parts

Conclusion: how did I do?

Tallying it all up here, this system would cost $1,218.84 to build at the time of writing, which is a fair bit more than the $699.99 / £699.99 / AU$1,200 base price of the PS5 Pro; if you're not in the US that's around £900 or AU$1,800, although of course you could end up paying a bit more or bit less depending on what components you go for and what deals you can find.

We're also missing one key feature, Wi-Fi 7 - but frankly, you should be using any gaming PC or console plugged into a wired Ethernet connection for the best service. In any case, I still think I've come out on top here. Hear me out...

If you want the 'full' PS5 Pro experience, it'll actually cost you closer to $825 in the US. That's because that $699.99 model doesn't include a disk drive – something that, frankly, home consoles should have as standard given the current game sales ecosystem – and Sony couldn't even be bothered to include the stand, which costs an extra $25. Finally, in order to play your games online (and access other free-on-PC features like cloud saves), you'll need to fork out $80 a year for PS Plus, assuming you opt for the lowest 'Essential' subscription tier. And if you want more than one DualSense controller? That'll be another $70.

In other words, buying a PS5 Pro today will cost you more over the next five years than building and using this PC for the same amount of time. Oh, and this system has no issues with generational backwards compatibility, has access to a far wider variety of games with better sales than the PS Store ever sees, and can even be upgraded at any point should you have the extra cash.

Building a gaming PC isn't even that hard any more - if you need tips, you can literally DM me on Twitter. That's not a joke. (Image credit: Shutterstock / Skrypnykov Dmytro)

Plus, with the occasional injection of some new components at a lower cost than the complete system, it'll also last forever – while Sony is almost certainly going to insist that you buy a PlayStation 6 at some point in the next decade, and that one will probably be even more expensive. Oh, and I guess you can use it for stuff other than gaming, too. There's this 'work' thing I've heard a lot about.

While I've gone with dollar pricing for the components, some quick online research showed me that it's even better value for gamers in most other territories to build a gaming PC rather than buy a PS5 Pro – the new console is almost universally more expensive outside the US, particularly in the UK, where its £699 base price equals to more than nine hundred bucks!

If that $1,219 asking price is too high (and that's before even factoring in any better deals that might crop up later in the year), I'd be perfectly comfortable recommending an RTX 4060 or 4060 Ti – or a Radeon RX 7700 XT, if you prefer AMD over Nvidia – for the GPU in this system, which would shave a decent chunk off the price without causing too much of a performance drop. After all, that RTX 4070 at full price accounts for almost half the cost of the entire PC – not that you should cheap out on your graphics card for a gaming PC, mind you.

So yes, I'm happy with this setup, and I won't be spending my own hard-earned money on a PS5 Pro. PC gaming is king, and that's never going to change as long as I'm around. Oh, and one last thing - don't forget, you can nab free games from the Epic Games Store every single week just by making an account. What do you think of that, Sony?

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