A possible summary is:
The video is about building the cheapest PC possible with components from Amazon.com. The hosts encounter many compatibility issues and failures with the parts they ordered, such as a server motherboard, a graphics card with a rare connector, and OEM memory modules. They try different combinations of CPUs and RAMs, but none of them work. They eventually get the PC to boot with a different motherboard, but the performance is terrible for gaming and other tasks. They compare their experience to a previous video where they bought a pre-built PC and upgraded it with a GPU, which was much better and cheaper. They conclude that buying the cheapest parts is not worth it and recommend buying a working computer and upgrading it later. They also blame the Amazon seller for misleading them about the parts.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
- The text is a transcript of a video where two people try to build the cheapest PC possible with components from Amazon.com.
- The first attempt fails because the motherboard, CPU, RAM and graphics card are not compatible with each other.
- The second attempt succeeds after replacing the motherboard, CPU and RAM with more compatible parts.
- The graphics card is a Radeon 6350 with a DMS 59 connector that requires an adapter to connect to a monitor.
- The PC can run Dota 2 and Rocket League at low settings and low resolution, but the performance is not very good.
- The PC costs about $150 in total, which is more expensive than buying a used PC and upgrading it with a GPU.