The definitive resource for PC enthusiasts

The Short Answer

For a mid-range gaming build (RTX 5070 Ti class GPU), buy an 850W ATX 3.1 80+ Gold fully-modular unit from a reputable brand: Corsair RMx, Seasonic Focus GX, EVGA SuperNova G7, MSI MAG. Spend $130-$170. For a high-end build (RTX 5080/5090), step up to 1000W.

How to Pick a Wattage

Add your CPU TDP, GPU TGP, and 100W of overhead for everything else. Then add 30% headroom for transient spikes and aging. So:

Why ATX 3.1 Matters

The 12V-2×6 connector (improved revision of 12VHPWR) is the standard for current and future high-end GPUs. ATX 3.1 PSUs ship with this connector native, support proper transient spike handling, and pass the certified “Cybenetics” testing for safety. If you’re building a system that may host a modern NVIDIA flagship, ATX 3.1 is non-optional.

Efficiency Ratings Decoded

Modular vs Semi-Modular vs Non-Modular

Fully modular is worth the small premium for any build over $1,000 — cable management is easier, swaps are easier, and you don’t ship dead weight. Semi-modular (main 24-pin and CPU cables fixed) is fine for budget builds. Non-modular is a no in 2026.

Brands to Trust

Brands to Avoid

Any PSU under $50 from an unbranded or low-reputation manufacturer. These units commonly fail their own ratings, have inadequate transient protection, and can damage other components when they fail. The phrase “I saved money on a PSU” precedes the most expensive computer failure stories.

Warranty Length as a Quality Signal

PSU warranty length correlates strongly with quality:

The 12VHPWR/12V-2×6 Connector Safety Story

If you’ve seen the news about melted GPU connectors, here’s the reality: the original 12VHPWR (ATX 3.0) had real engineering issues, particularly with bent cables and insufficient pin retention. The updated 12V-2×6 (ATX 3.1) addresses the worst of these problems. Best practices:

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