▲ 4 r/buildapcaus+2 crossposts

Looking for the best 1440p gaming desktop build in Dubai

Hey guys,

I’m looking to build a gaming desktop mainly for 1440p gaming at high/ultra settings with good FPS.

For the past few weeks, I’ve been doing some research and the RX 9070 XT + Ryzen 7 7800X3D seems to be one of the best combinations for what I’m looking for.

My budget is around AED 7,500 for the complete PC build.

Is there any better CPU/GPU combination I should consider within a similar budget? I’m open to both AMD and NVIDIA.

Also, if anyone has recently built a similar PC in Dubai/UAE, please share your specs and where you bought the parts from.

Thanks!

reddit.com
u/SnooHamsters4696 — 4 hours ago
▲ 2 r/DubaiGaming+1 crossposts

Parts to consider while building a PC

So now im planning to build a PC thats cost effective to play GTA6 1080p at high settings without throttling.
5060ti 16GB? Please suggest a build around this or let me know if i need to change my choice of card for this build.

So im looking for what parts should i consider to build around this card.

reddit.com
u/SnooHamsters4696 — 10 days ago

Is this a good setup?

So im looking to buy a gaming setup. Is this a good setup? And let me know if there is anything better you can find at this price?

Price is Aed 6599.

u/SnooHamsters4696 — 10 days ago

Looking for a PSN gift card india

Do any of you know how to buy PSN gift cards from India?
I used to buy them from Amazon india, now every thing is out of stock.
I used them to buy games here its cheaper that way.

reddit.com
u/SnooHamsters4696 — 11 days ago

Credit card for 15K monthly salary

Hey everyone, looking for recommendations based on my priorities below. Open to a no-annual-fee card or a paid one if the benefits actually justify it.

Main priorities (in order):

  1. Cashback
  2. Movie tickets (discounts/offers)
  3. Lounge access
  4. Fuel spend rewards

My salary is 15K AED/month — please only suggest cards I'd realistically qualify for. Would appreciate if you could mention:

  • Which bank
  • Annual fee (if any)
  • Why it's good for these categories

Thanks in advance!

reddit.com
u/SnooHamsters4696 — 13 days ago
▲ 3 r/UAE

Anyone else dealt with errors on their accident report? Curious how common this is

Yesterday I was driving on E311 road on the way to Sharjah. There was a truck right in front of me, and a tire (looked like it came off a trailer) was lying in the lane. The truck swerved to avoid it at the last second, but I had cars on both sides - no room to change lanes, no room to brake in time. I ran over it and it wrecked my car.

Called the police, they took about an hour to arrive. When the report finally came through, it listed the accident as my fault for "not noticing the road update" in time. I get that's how liability works here, but I'm still mulling over the fact that there was genuinely nowhere for me to go in that moment.

That's not even the part I wanted to vent about, though. The car got towed to a garage near where I live, and the garage told me the report was incomplete - basic stuff like my name and license details were filled in wrong, even though they had my license in hand when writing it up.

So I had to go back to the police station that issued it (different emirate from where I live), pay for parking, get a hard copy printed at my own cost, and then get told again that a detail was wrong, requiring another round of corrections before they'd email me the corrected version. Meanwhile the officers seemed to find the whole thing pretty amusing.

This isn't the first runaround I've had — I once got conflicting instructions between two different departments for paying off a fine, bounced back and forth, and was told to come back a different day despite having gone out of my way already.

I've lived here my whole life and have basically worked nonstop since I was 24. None of this is enough to make me want to leave, but the lack of accountability for small, avoidable mistakes that end up costing other people time, money, and a day of work is genuinely frustrating.

Curious if others have run into the same thing — incomplete reports, conflicting instructions between departments, etc. — and how you handled it.

reddit.com
u/SnooHamsters4696 — 13 days ago
▲ 2 r/u_SnooHamsters4696+1 crossposts

Anyone else dealt with errors on their accident report? Curious how common this is

Yesterday I was driving on E311 road on the way to Sharjah. There was a truck right in front of me, and a tire (looked like it came off a trailer) was lying in the lane. The truck swerved to avoid it at the last second, but I had cars on both sides - no room to change lanes, no room to brake in time. I ran over it and it wrecked my car.

Called the police, they took about an hour to arrive. When the report finally came through, it listed the accident as my fault for "not noticing the road update" in time. I get that's how liability works here, but I'm still mulling over the fact that there was genuinely nowhere for me to go in that moment.

That's not even the part I wanted to vent about, though. The car got towed to a garage near where I live, and the garage told me the report was incomplete - basic stuff like my name and license details were filled in wrong, even though they had my license in hand when writing it up.

So I had to go back to the police station that issued it (different emirate from where I live), pay for parking, get a hard copy printed at my own cost, and then get told again that a detail was wrong, requiring another round of corrections before they'd email me the corrected version. Meanwhile the officers seemed to find the whole thing pretty amusing.

This isn't the first runaround I've had — I once got conflicting instructions between two different departments for paying off a fine, bounced back and forth, and was told to come back a different day despite having gone out of my way already.

I've lived here my whole life and have basically worked nonstop since I was 24. None of this is enough to make me want to leave, but the lack of accountability for small, avoidable mistakes that end up costing other people time, money, and a day of work is genuinely frustrating.

Curious if others have run into the same thing — incomplete reports, conflicting instructions between departments, etc. — and how you handled it.

reddit.com
u/SnooHamsters4696 — 13 days ago
▲ 8 r/dubai

Anyone else dealt with errors on their accident report? Curious how common this is

Yesterday I was driving on E311 road on the way to Sharjah. There was a truck right in front of me, and a tire (looked like it came off a trailer) was lying in the lane. The truck swerved to avoid it at the last second, but I had cars on both sides - no room to change lanes, no room to brake in time. I ran over it and it wrecked my car.

Called the police, they took about an hour to arrive. When the report finally came through, it listed the accident as my fault for "not noticing the road update" in time. I get that's how liability works here, but I'm still mulling over the fact that there was genuinely nowhere for me to go in that moment.

That's not even the part I wanted to vent about, though. The car got towed to a garage near where I live, and the garage told me the report was incomplete - basic stuff like my name and license details were filled in wrong, even though they had my license in hand when writing it up.

So I had to go back to the police station that issued it (different emirate from where I live), pay for parking, get a hard copy printed at my own cost, and then get told again that a detail was wrong, requiring another round of corrections before they'd email me the corrected version. Meanwhile the officers seemed to find the whole thing pretty amusing.

This isn't the first runaround I've had — I once got conflicting instructions between two different departments for paying off a fine, bounced back and forth, and was told to come back a different day despite having gone out of my way already.

I've lived here my whole life and have basically worked nonstop since I was 24. None of this is enough to make me want to leave, but the lack of accountability for small, avoidable mistakes that end up costing other people time, money, and a day of work is genuinely frustrating.

Curious if others have run into the same thing — incomplete reports, conflicting instructions between departments, etc. — and how you handled it.

reddit.com
u/SnooHamsters4696 — 13 days ago