- Joined
- Nov 13, 2007
- Messages
- 10,233 (1.70/day)
- Location
- Austin Texas
Processor | 13700KF Undervolted @ 5.6/ 5.5, 4.8Ghz Ring 200W PL1 |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI 690-I PRO |
Cooling | Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 w/ Arctic P12 Fans |
Memory | 48 GB DDR5 7600 MHZ CL36 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4090 FE |
Storage | 2x 2TB WDC SN850, 1TB Samsung 960 prr |
Display(s) | Alienware 32" 4k 240hz OLED |
Case | SLIGER S620 |
Audio Device(s) | Yes |
Power Supply | Corsair SF750 |
Mouse | Xlite V2 |
Keyboard | RoyalAxe |
Software | Windows 11 |
Benchmark Scores | They're pretty good, nothing crazy. |
I'd have to see a run of fresh benchmarks to put forward an opinion about 1080p gaming, to be honest I'm highly doubtful that there's a large gap in fps compared to a 7700k now that drivers, patches, agesa codes etc have been done. The platform has matured but unfortunately lingering views from the early days are still getting repeated. The problem with low res on badly coded games is it exaggerates how "poorly" the CPU is performing, based only on the fact the game isn't spreading out the load across all threads, like nearly all AAA titles do these days.
Edit: and I have to comment on how silky smooth games run, no occasional stuttering like I used to get on my 6700k setup.
^^ OH MY GOD... that used to drive me nuts... and then whenever i would mention it on forums, people would act like i was crazy... I ended up ditching an SSD, and taking out my wifi card tryinng to figure out the cause.
i have a 144hz Gsync, and those stutters were like a cold slap in the face since everything else was buttery smooth. The frame pacing is much more consistent with ryzen.