A: My PC specs are always listed in the descriptions of every one of my videos along with Amazon links for you to easily check the prices and decide whether it's a good fit for you. Always check the latest video for the most updated parts list.
A: Over the years I have collected several graphics cards, and the list will continue to expand indefinitely, but as of August 29th, 2025, this is the full updated comprehensive list.
AMD FirePro W4100 2GB GDDR5
AMD Radeon RX 550 4GB GDDR5
AMD Radeon RX 550 4GB GDDR5 (Yes I have two)
AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT 8GB Gigabyte Gaming OC
AMD Radeon RX 580 2048SP 8GB AISURIX
AMD Radeon RX 6600M 8GB MOUGOL
AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT 16GB XFX SWFT 319
NVIDIA GeForce GT 710 2GB ASUS GDDR5 EVO
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti 11GB Gigabyte AORUS Xtreme
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti ASUS ROG Strix
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 6GB Laptop GPU
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 16GB Zotac Gaming Trinity
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16GB MSI Gaming Trio
NVIDIA Quadro 6000 6GB
NVIDIA Quadro 7000 6GB
NVIDIA Quadro K4200 4GB
NVIDIA Quadro RTX 4000 Ada 20GB
NVIDIA Quadro RTX 4500 Ada 24GB
NVIDIA Quadro RTX A6000 48GB
NVIDIA Riva TNT2 M64 Vanta 32MB SDR AGP
GPUs I no longer own:
AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT 16GB Gigabyte Gaming OC
Intel Arc B580 12GB
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2050 4GB Laptop GPU
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 12GB MSI Ventus 2X
NVIDIA Quadro RTX A6000 48GB (The original one was sold but I still have another)
A: Every Friday @ 3PM EST.
If I ever miss an upload for whatever reason, a video will be published the following Saturday, Sunday, or next Friday at the same time.
A: I'm not sure, I just prefer keeping my real life and online lives separate.
From experience, faceless content is also a lot easier to produce, so I'm gonna keep the videos faceless.
A: When building a balanced gaming PC with the smallest bottleneck possible, it is crucial to consider your own personal needs and what specific games you play. Remember, you are building a PC for yourself, not for validation from random people on the internet who you will never see, hear, or meet in real life. Regardless, my best advice is to simply search up your desired CPU/GPU combo on YouTube and watching benchmarks for games that you intend to play, and seeing if that combo is able to get your desired FPS in the games you play.
A: Never ask the first question. Brand loyalty is one of the worst things in the world and I stand by that. However, I will still try to help you make a decision as best as I can.
Objectively, if you care about RTX, CUDA, NVENC, DLSS, or any other NVIDIA-specific features, choose NVIDIA. Since the GeForce RTX 20 series, NVIDIA has been objectively better at ray tracing, and opposed to what other people will say about their cards, they are actually good value as long as you take advantage of their features.
If you don't care about ray tracing or any other NVIDIA specific features, AMD is almost always better in price to performance. The only exception is the RX 9000 series, where it is almost impossible to find those cards for anywhere near MSRP, whereas NVIDIA's 5070/Ti can often be found at or below MSRP.
Subjectively, my final piece of advice is to pretty much always buy a used GPU if your budget is below $500. You will get much better performance for a much cheaper price by getting a used card safely on any trusted local marketplace. By buying used, you can even avoid taxes and shipping costs, just be wary of the risks. I've never been scammed by buying a used graphics card but I cannot guarantee that you won't, so again be very careful, and if the price is too good to be true, it probably is.
In the $500-1000 range you might still prefer to get a used GPU for better FPS per dollar, but from here and up, I would start looking at the newest-gen GPUs for longer driver support as well as the newest features. It's hard to recommend spending $900+ on an old-generation graphics card.
A: No.
A: Fortnite is constantly being updated and is becoming harder and harder to run for everyone.
When comparing your system to others with the same specs, be sure to check the date that the video you're comparing to was uploaded, as it is has become much harder to get high framerates, especially in creative while looking into the sky. For example, I used to be able to get 1300-1500 FPS in creative while staring into the sky, and now it's down to about 1000 FPS. This is nothing to worry about, and as long as you are getting the expected framerates in actual matches, it's completely fine. Otherwise, look into a CPU or PC upgrade.
A: I try to stream on Friday/Saturday/Sunday.
If you want to be notified whenever I stream, YouTube is very bad with live notifications, so tap the bell next to the subscribe button, turn on all notifications, and enable YouTube app notifications on your phone to never miss a stream.
A: That is none of your business and quite possibly my least favourite question that people ask me.
A: When you send me a message on any social media, it will end up in their respective "message requests" section which I will naturally check every once in a while. If I have not responded to you I either haven't seen it or don't have the time, or both. I am human, and simply cannot respond to every single person, and I am very sorry to anyone I've left on delivered!
A: My friend gifted me his second account.
A: My videos are set to "Members first" for YouTube members (Champion, Unreal, and Pro Tier) to view before a video is available to the public.
If you are interested in getting videos days, or even weeks early, consider joining the channel.
A: I only review anything that I personally think is worth taking a look at, though that does not mean that all reviews for this specific type of software are inherently useless.
Tweaking utilities and software, whether you like them or not, are essentially the exact same things repasted and copied over by different people. Of course some will be more polished than others, but because they are pretty much all exactly the same I personally don't think any of them are worth covering on the channel, at least for now. Most of them target Windows 10/11, and as long as that's the case, they will almost all be exactly the same, with extremely minor differences.
It's also very difficult to recommend, or recommend against one single software for thousands of unique people with completely different PCs, especially when a good free version doesn't necessarily mean that the paid version will be worth the money.