Quick Answer

A solid dual PC streaming setup under R80,000 in South Africa pairs a gaming rig built around a Ryzen 7 7700 and RTX 4070 Super with a dedicated streaming PC running a Ryzen 5 5600 and basic GPU, linked by a capture card and Elgato 4K X. Split the budget roughly R55,000 to the gaming PC and R20,000 to the streaming box, leaving R5,000 for the capture card, audio interface, and cabling.

Why Dual PC Beats Single PC for Serious Streamers

Running OBS, your game, Discord, browser overlays, and stream alerts on one machine eats CPU cycles you'd rather spend on frames. A dedicated streaming PC offloads encoding entirely, so your gaming rig pushes Apex or Warzone at max settings while the second box handles 1080p60 NVENC or x264 encoding without a single dropped frame. For SA streamers on Twitch or Kick where bandwidth caps and load shedding already complicate uptime, a clean encode means viewers stay locked in.

At the R80,000 level you're not skimping. This is a build that competes with anything Faze or G2 affiliates use, and Evetech ships the full bill of materials nationwide with same-week delivery to most metros.

The Gaming PC Build (Around R55,000)

For the main rig, anchor the build with a Ryzen 7 7700 paired with a B650 motherboard and 32GB DDR5-6000. The CPU sits in the sweet spot for high-refresh 1440p gaming and won't choke when you're alt-tabbing between game and chat overlays.

On the GPU side, an RTX 4070 Super delivers reliable 144fps+ at 1440p in CS2, Valorant, and Fortnite, and it has the NVENC chip you'd use as a fallback if the streaming PC ever drops out. Add a 1TB Gen4 NVMe like the WD SN850X for fast load times, a 850W 80+ Gold PSU for headroom, and a mid-tower with three intake fans because Joburg summers don't forgive bad airflow.

The Streaming PC Build (Around R20,000)

The streaming box doesn't need a flagship CPU. A Ryzen 5 5600 on a B550 motherboard with 16GB DDR4-3200 is more than enough for x264 fast preset at 1080p60 and 6000Kbps. Skip the discrete GPU if you're going pure x264 software encoding, or add a low-end card like a GT 1030 if you need display output for OBS scenes.

A 500GB NVMe holds the OS, OBS, replay buffer, and a few weeks of VOD archive. Use a quiet 550W Bronze PSU and a basic micro-ATX case. The whole rig sips around 150W under load, which matters when you're balancing a UPS during loadshedding so the stream stays live through Stage 4.

Capture Card, Audio, and Cabling (Around R5,000)

The Elgato 4K X is the gold standard for dual PC at this budget. It passes 4K60 HDR to your monitor and feeds 1080p60 to the streaming PC over USB 3.2 Gen 2. Pair it with a GoXLR Mini or a TC-Helicon GO XLR for clean audio routing, then run a 2m DisplayPort 1.4 cable from gaming PC to monitor and a HDMI 2.1 from gaming PC to capture card.

Don't forget a basic KVM or a Stream Deck Mini for scene switching. Both fit comfortably in the remaining budget.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I run a dual PC stream on a single monitor?

Yes, but it's awkward. Use a KVM switch or run OBS on a tablet via NDI. Most SA streamers add a second 1080p panel for the streaming PC because it's cheaper than a KVM and you can keep an eye on chat and stream health at a glance.

Will this dual PC setup survive loadshedding?

With a 1500VA UPS dedicated to the streaming PC, capture card, and modem, you can keep broadcasting through short Stage 2 windows. The gaming PC will need a separate 2000VA UPS or you'll have to take the L on stream when the lights go.

Is dual PC overkill for 1080p Twitch streaming?

If you're playing Valorant or League at competitive settings and pushing 240Hz, a single PC with NVENC handles it cleanly. Dual PC pays off when you're running CPU-heavy games like Warzone or Tarkov, multiple capture sources, or you want broadcast-grade x264 quality without sacrificing in-game frames.

Ready to Find Your Perfect Match? Spec your dual PC streaming build with our top gaming PC deals. Shop gaming PC deals at Evetech