Best gaming PC build under ₹85,000 in June 2026
Component prices will continue to soar with the AI boom and that makes building a budget PC that much more difficult. The Ryzen 5 5600X is still a capable gaming CPU in 2025, the RTX 5060 brings Blackwell architecture and DLSS 4 to a mid-range price point, and the rest of the component list is sensibly specced for a 1080p-primary, 1440p-capable gaming machine. There’s no RGB overkill, no unnecessary premium parts, and no wasted spend – just a clean, functional build with room in the budget for future upgrades. Here’s what you’re getting and why it works.
SurveyAlso read: Best Intel gaming PC build under Rs 1,05,000
AMD Ryzen 5 5600X (₹13,000)

Zen 3 architecture, 6 cores, 12 threads, boosting to 4.6 GHz. The 5600X is a 2020 chip that still holds up well for gaming in 2025 – Zen 3’s strong IPC means it isn’t meaningfully bottlenecking the RTX 5060 at 1080p or 1440p in most titles. At ₹13,000 it’s excellent value, and the AM4 platform’s maturity means driver and firmware support is rock solid. The honest caveat: AM4 is a dead-end socket, so this CPU is the ceiling of what this motherboard will ever run.
INNO3D RTX 5060 Twin X2 SFF 8GB GDDR7 (₹35,000)

The star of the build. The RTX 5060 brings NVIDIA’s Blackwell architecture – hardware ray tracing, GDDR7 memory bandwidth, and DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation – down to mid-range money. At 1080p high settings expect 90–110 fps native in demanding AAA titles, climbing well past 130 fps with DLSS 4 Quality mode enabled. The compact SFF dual-fan design fits the Elite 350 without any clearance concerns, and the card’s PCIe 4.0 interface runs at Gen 3 speeds on this board – a difference that amounts to roughly 1–2% in gaming, too small to matter.
Gigabyte B450M K DDR4 (₹5,000)

A no-frills mATX board that does exactly what’s required: accepts the 5600X, runs dual-channel DDR4, and provides a PCIe 3.0 x16 slot for the GPU. At ₹5,000 it’s the budget anchor of the build. One thing to check before buying, the board may need a BIOS update to recognise the Ryzen 5 5600X. If your unit ships with older firmware and doesn’t support Q-Flash Plus, you’ll need a compatible older Ryzen CPU to update first. Worth confirming with the seller.
Also read: Best Gaming PC under Rs 70,000 in April 2026
Adata Premier 16GB (2×8GB) DDR4-3200 (₹10,000)
Dual-channel DDR4-3200 is the sweet spot for Zen 3, AMD’s memory controller on Ryzen 5000 is tuned around this frequency, and the dual-channel configuration meaningfully improves 1% low frame times in CPU-sensitive titles. Enable XMP in BIOS immediately after first boot to confirm it’s running at 3200 MHz rather than the default 2133 MHz JEDEC spec. The Premier series skips the heatspreader, which is fine, the Spectrum V3 cooler clears low-profile DIMMs easily.
Crucial E100 1TB Gen 4 NVMe (₹14,000)

A capable Gen 4 drive rated for around 5,000 MB/s sequential reads, though on the B450 platform, the M.2 slot caps at Gen 3 speeds, bringing that down to roughly 3,500 MB/s in practice. The drive is fully backward compatible and works without issue, but if you’re buying fresh, a Gen 3 alternative like the WD Blue SN570 or Lexar NM610 Pro saves ₹5,000–6,000 for identical real-world performance on this board. If the E100 is already in hand, use it without concern.
DeepCool PL550D Bronze 550W ATX 3.1 (₹3,500)
An 80 Plus Bronze certified 550W unit with full ATX 3.1 compliance and a native 12V-2×6 connector. The RTX 5060 draws under 150W at peak and the 5600X sits around 80W under gaming load, leaving this PSU running comfortably under 50% capacity – the efficiency sweet spot for Bronze units. 550W also provides enough headroom for a GPU upgrade to the RTX 5070 tier without swapping the power supply.
Cooler Master Hyper 212 Spectrum V3 (₹2,050)
Right-sized for this CPU. The 5600X’s 65W TDP is well within the Spectrum V3’s capability, sitting under 72°C under sustained all-core load. The PWM fan adjusts speed dynamically, running quietly during gaming where the CPU isn’t fully saturated.
Cooler Master Elite 350 ARGB M-ATX (₹4,200)
Mesh front panel for airflow, tempered glass side for component visibility, and pre-installed ARGB fans that sync with the B450M K’s motherboard headers. The interior is clean and easy to build in, the RTX 5060 SFF fits without drama, and build quality is solid for the price. Nothing flashy, everything functional.
Summary
| Component | Model | Price |
| CPU | AMD Ryzen 5 5600X | ₹13,000 |
| GPU | INNO3D RTX 5060 Twin X2 SFF 8GB GDDR7 | ₹35,000 |
| Motherboard | Gigabyte B450M K DDR4 | ₹5,000 |
| RAM | Adata Premier 16GB DDR4-3200 | ₹10,000 |
| SSD | Crucial E100 1TB Gen 4 NVMe | ₹14,000 |
| PSU | DeepCool PL550D Bronze 550W ATX 3.1 | ₹3,500 |
| CPU Cooler | Cooler Master Hyper 212 Spectrum V3 | ₹2,050 |
| Case | Cooler Master Elite 350 ARGB M-ATX | ₹4,200 |
| Total | ₹86,750 |
Performance Expectations
The 5600X and RTX 5060 is a well-matched pairing for 1080p gaming. Expect 85–105 fps at 1080p high settings across demanding AAA titles like Cyberpunk 2077 and Black Myth: Wukong in native raster, with DLSS 4 Quality mode pushing that past 130 fps on supported titles – making a 144Hz monitor a natural companion. At 1440p medium-high settings, native frame rates sit in the 60–75 fps range with DLSS comfortably pushing past 90 fps. Esports titles at 1080p run at 150 fps and above without effort. Full system draw under gaming load sits around 200–220W, well within the PSU’s comfort zone.
Upgrade Options
The most impactful immediate change is swapping the Crucial E100 for a Gen 3 NVMe like the WD Blue SN570 (₹8,000–9,000), which saves ₹5,000 for identical on-platform performance and frees up budget for elsewhere. Doubling RAM to 32GB DDR4 (₹8,000–10,000) is the next sensible step as modern games push past 16GB, and the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D (₹18,000–22,000) is the single best CPU upgrade this platform supports – its 3D V-Cache delivers gaming performance that trades blows with Zen 4 chips costing significantly more. Beyond that, a GPU jump to the RTX 5070 is where AM4 starts hitting its ceiling and a full platform rebuild begins making more sense than incremental spending.
Also read: Snowflake-Anthropic deepen AI handshake as India emerges as key market
I have a keyboard and I'm not afraid to use it, because I have a license to quill. View Full Profile
