Quick Answer

ATX 3.1 is the cleaner choice for new high-end builds, while ATX 3.0 is still acceptable when the PSU is high quality and correctly sized. For streaming on Twitch and YouTube, focus on wattage, connector safety, and GPU plans before paying extra for the newest label.

What ATX 3.1 Changes

ATX 3.1 refines the modern GPU power connector approach, including the 12V-2x6 connector that improves contact behaviour compared with earlier 12VHPWR implementations. It also keeps the focus on handling short power spikes from modern graphics cards.

That does not make every ATX 3.0 PSU bad. A reputable 750W or 850W ATX 3.0 unit can still be a solid buy if it includes the right cable, clear warranty, and enough headroom for the GPU.

Fit For Streaming On Twitch And Youtube

Streaming PCs can have a GPU, capture card, extra drives, and USB gear running together. Leave wattage headroom so fan noise and transient spikes do not become stability problems mid-stream. Broad SA pricing can place decent 750W to 850W Gold-rated PSUs around R1,600 to R3,500, with premium ATX 3.1 and higher-wattage models costing more.

If the price jump forces you to cut the GPU, SSD, or RAM too hard, choose the better overall build rather than chasing the newest PSU standard alone.

Check Cables And Case Fit

Do not bend a GPU power cable sharply at the connector. Leave room between the graphics card and side panel, route the cable cleanly, and use the PSU's own cable rather than random adapters.

Also check PSU length in compact cases. A powerful unit that blocks cable routing or airflow can make the build harder to service and noisier than necessary.

FAQ

Is ATX 3.1 required for RTX graphics cards?

No, but it is a smart choice for a new premium build using modern high-power GPUs. Quality ATX 3.0 units can still work when properly cabled.

What wattage should SA gamers buy?

Many mid-range gaming PCs fit 650W to 750W, while stronger GPU builds often target 850W. Always check the exact CPU and GPU combination.

Is the connector more important than efficiency?

Both matter, but connector fit and PSU quality are critical for stability. A high efficiency rating does not save a badly matched or poorly cabled PSU.

TIP

PSU after choosing the GPU, then confirm wattage, native cable support, case clearance, and warranty before checkout.