Building a PC in times like these is hard — rising RAM and SSD prices have made it so that the majority of a build’s budget is gone before you even choose a CPU or GPU. I’ve been tasked with building a PC for a dear friend of mine for $1,500, and my reputation as a tech journalist is on the line because I have to impress him by getting the best PC for the money.
For that, I thought of consulting with ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini to get a baseline of what I could expect, then continue with my own manual refinements to fine-tune the build. However, I was shocked by the answer that one AI model gave me, so much so that I barely had to make changes to what it came up with.
What I asked each AI to build for me
The exact prompt I fed to all three
Even though I was given a strict budget to work with, I asked my friend for the specifics of what he’d want from his PC. He specifically wanted an RTX 50 Series GPU and was fine with whatever CPU I went with. However, I chose Team Red, specifically X3D processors, which are good for gaming, thanks to AMD’s 3D V-Cache technology that helps reduce latency and improves any 1% lows.
The biggest issue was fitting in decent RAM and an SSD into this setup, and given how high prices have crept up recently, it’s difficult to do so within the $1,500 range. Unfortunately, these prices will never return to their previous levels. The SK Hynix CEO has already warned that the trend is expected to continue until 2030 (Via Reuters).
Nevertheless, I wanted to test AI models in this regard by giving them specific GPUs and CPUs to choose from, while letting them pick the rest of the components to measure their capabilities and whether AI-suggested builds can be decent, and this was the prompt I came up with that I fed to ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.
Hi, can you recommend the best possible gaming PC build with a $1,500 budget (as of July 2026)? I specifically want a GPU from the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50-series lineup and a CPU from AMD, particularly an X3D processor. For the rest of the components, you’re free to choose from.
Prioritize performance per dollar and find the lowest-priced, reputable components available so that as much of the budget as possible goes toward maximizing overall performance; lean towards an upgradeable path in the future but still avoid a bottleneck if that occurs,
Use current July 2026 pricing rather than MSRP whenever possible, and link me to the listings. Also, provide alternatives for any components if you can.
ChatGPT’s pricing memory was stuck in 2024
Solid specs, but you’ll need nearly $1,000 more for this kind of setup these days
At first sight, I loved the build ChatGPT came up with, but despite my prompt to list current pricing as of July 2026, OpenAI’s chatbot was still at least a couple of years behind. Keep in mind that I’m on the free plan, using ChatGPT 5.5 for these results. In any case, here are the specs ChatGPT recommended to me.
|
Component |
Recommendation |
Est. July Prices |
Actual Prices (Per PCPartPicker) |
Alternative Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
CPU |
Ryzen 7 9800X3D |
$420–440 |
$444.00 |
Ryzen 9 9900X3D (if on sale) |
|
CPU Cooler |
Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 SE |
$35–45 |
$35.90 |
Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE |
|
RAM |
32GB (2×16GB) DDR5-6000 CL30 (Corsair Vengeance) |
$85–95 |
$469 (–$30 discount) |
TeamGroup T-Create Expert |
|
SSD |
2TB WD Black SN850X PCIe 4.0 |
$95–110 |
$348 |
Lexar NM790 |
|
PSU |
MSI MAG A850GL (850W, 80+ Gold) |
$95–110 |
$105.25 |
Seasonic Focus GX-850 |
|
GPU |
RTX 5070Ti 16GB |
$760–790 |
$969.99 |
NA |
|
Case |
Phanteks XT Pro Ultra |
$65–75 |
$79.00 (–$10 discount) |
Montech Air 903 Max |
|
Motherboard |
MSI PRO B650-S Wi-Fi |
$130–150 |
$146.00 |
Gigabyte B650 Eagle AX |
|
Total |
$1,685–1,815 |
$2,597.14 |
Overall, ChatGPT recommended a solid build to me, but it’s practically impossible to get this PC at these prices. There was an $852 difference when I compared ChatGPT’s prices to the actual prices for those parts I found and saved on PCPartPicker for viewing.
Gemini’s build was exactly how I pictured it
Not good but not bad either
Going into Gemini, I didn’t expect much after the utter disappointment of ChatGPT. I used Gemini’s 3.5 Flash Model (again on the free plan) and, like ChatGPT, Google’s AI was also far behind on pricing despite my prompting it to list current July 2026 rates. Anyhow, here’s the setup Gemini provided me with:
|
Component |
Recommendation |
Est. July Prices |
Actual Prices (Per PCPartPicker) |
Alternative Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
CPU |
Ryzen 7 7800X3D |
~$630 |
$348.99 |
NA |
|
CPU Cooler |
Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 SE |
~$35–40 |
$32.31 |
Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE |
|
RAM |
32GB (2×16GB) DDR5-6000 CL30 |
~$100 |
$469 (–$30 discount) |
Any brand |
|
SSD |
1TB WD Black SN850X PCIe 4.0 |
~$90 |
$219 |
Samsung 990 Pro |
|
PSU |
Corsair RM750e |
~$100 |
$89.99 |
NA |
|
GPU |
RTX 5070 |
~$325 |
$600 |
NA |
|
Case |
NZXT H6 Flow |
~$110 |
$89.97 |
Corsair 4000D Airflow |
|
Motherboard |
MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk Wi-Fi |
~$190 |
$175.99 |
NA |
|
Total |
$1,580 |
$1,995.25 |
Despite the RAM and SSD being priced higher, the total build cost came in just short of $2000, which is better than ChatGPT. Although this build is weaker than ChatGPT’s, the lower price makes up for the drop in performance. Anyhow, even though the RAM and SSD prices were far from what Gemini listed them at, I was able to spot an RTX 5070 for less than what Gemini had estimated, which was a shocker (finally, MSRP prices for Blackwell GPUs). You can find the build that Gemini created on PCPartPicker for detailed pricing and an overview of components.
Claude’s build was the most realistic and grounded but had one problem
The 16GB RAM choice is questionable
Disappointed by ChatGPT and in line with expectations from Gemini, I finally moved to Claude. I expected Anthropic’s AI model to outperform the rest. Using Claude Sonnet 5 with Medium effort, I got the most distinctive build I had seen within a $1,500 budget. Before discussing the setup further, here are the specifications Claude provided.
|
Component |
Recommendation |
Est. July Prices |
Actual Prices (Per PCPartPicker) |
Alternative Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
CPU |
Ryzen 7 7800X3D |
~$599 |
$348.99 |
RTX 5060Ti 16GB |
|
CPU Cooler |
Thermalright Peerless Assassin |
~$30 |
$31.41 |
Ryzen 7 7700X3D (Releases 16 July 2026) |
|
RAM |
16GB DDR5-6000 CL30 (single stick) |
~$200–220 |
$204.99 |
NA |
|
SSD |
WD Blue SN580 NVMe Gen4 |
~$60–70 |
$270.15 |
Crucial P3 Plus |
|
PSU |
Any 750W 80+ Gold |
~$75–85 |
$59.99 |
NA |
|
GPU |
RTX 5070 12GB |
~$325 |
$600 |
NA |
|
Case |
Any budget airflow ATX/mATX |
~$55–65 |
$49.99 |
NA |
|
Motherboard |
ASRock B650M-HDV/M.2 |
~$140–150 |
$109.99 |
NA |
|
Total |
$1,485–1,515 |
$1,674.51 |
Claude’s build was the closest to real-world pricing these days, excluding the SSD prices, which were still off by more than 4x. Even if this build is weaker than ChatGPT and Gemini’s setup, it’s still a good setup with realistic pricing. However, the 16GB RAM choice is a bummer and bottlenecks against the RTX 5070 and Ryzen 7 7800X3D. You can find this build on PCPartPicker, and it’s the one I chose, with some more changes, of course.
I ended up going with Claude’s build (with a few tweaks, of course)
Of all the setups, Claude’s PC was the most realistic option I could get for $1,500 these days. Even though ChatGPT and Gemini offered more powerful options, their actual prices were way higher than they had estimated. Nevertheless, Claude’s setup wasn’t perfect either, as it was limited to 16GB of RAM, and since I was on a strict budget, stretching the capacity to 32GB would be going over the budget,
Regardless, I still went for 32GB of RAM, and to offset the extra cost, I removed the SSD option since my friend already had a Samsung 970 Evo Plus, a PCIe 3.0 drive. Even though it’s a slower drive than I wanted for this build, it will work for the time being. Adding the Corsair Vengeance 32GB RAM brought the total budget to $1,630, which was still $130 over the initial budget, but the costly components left us with no choice. The rest of the components are pretty good, and there isn’t much variance in GPUs and CPUs, given that I am going for a specific product category.
So…are AI-suggested builds good?
NAND and DRAM prices aren’t expected to go down anytime soon, and the pricing data I got from these AI models still lags reality, so they shouldn’t be accepted at face value. This is why I opted to check prices manually on PCPartPicker, went for the lowest available prices for each component, and summed the costs to compare with the quotes from the AI models. Nevertheless, Claude was the only one who gave me a decent foundation to work from, and after some tweaks (pushing the memory configuration to 32GB and removing the SSD), the final build I came up with was satisfactory, and my friend approved of it.
- Developer
-
Anthropic PBC
- Price model
-
Free, subscription available
Claude is an advanced artificial intelligence assistant developed by Anthropic. Built on Constitutional AI principles, it excels at complex reasoning, sophisticated writing, and professional-grade coding assistance.











