Among 750Ti cards, the
PNY GTX 750 Ti XLR8 OC seems to be one of the quietest under load. The thing is the entire series of cards - 750Ti - isn't very good for games. 750Ti will give you the performance barely better than PS4 which isn't what PC gaming is about. I think if you are going to build a new gaming PC, do it right or keep saving. You should do more research because you are starting off with a sub-optimal videocard choice. It's even possible to buy an R9 270 on Newegg for $135 right now and that card is 30% faster than the 750Ti in games. As you can see, just $35-50 extra over 750Ti gets you
a lot of performance. The main selling point of the 750Ti was its power usage, otherwise its performance is nothing special. Essentially for the price of new 1 PC game you get 60-70% more performance over what the 750Ti delivers.
http://www.computerbase.de/2015-01/...-im-test/3/#abschnitt_leistungsratings_spiele
A used 7970 1Ghz would be 75-90% faster than a 750Ti and it's possible to find those for $120. If you are truly trying to build a budget gaming PC, that's the path you should be looking at or waiting for a deal on a 960/380 level card. IMO, it's better to spend $135-160 than spend $100 and the card is outdated in 12 months. 750Ti makes sense if it's $70-80, that's it.
If you want to purchase new, save a little more $ and try to wait for a deal on a 950/960/380. Right now the 950 is
$140 and over the holidays a deal is bound to come up for $125-130 on this card. IMO, it's worth it to spend the extra $ over the 750Ti. 750Ti itself isn't a good budget gaming card at all unless you have a 300W OEM PSU. If you are building a system from scratch, I presume you are buying a good PSU. If you are trying to find the best budget gaming card for the $, then it would be HD7950/7970/7970Ghz in the used market. Otherwise, it's worth it to move up to the 950/960/380 level.