- Joined
- Oct 19, 2007
- Messages
- 8,327 (1.29/day)
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D w/ Corsair iCue Link H150i LCD |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X870E-E Gaming WiFi |
Cooling | 10x120mm Corsair QX120 RGB fans |
Memory | Corsair Dominator Titanium RGB DDR5 RAM 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 7000MHz CL34 |
Video Card(s) | Asus RTX 3080Ti STRIX OC |
Storage | Crucial T700 1TB Gen5, Samsung 990 PRO Series - 2TB PCIe Gen4, Crucial P3 Plus 1TB PCIe Gen4 |
Display(s) | Acer Predator XB323U |
Case | Corsair 6500D Airflow with 10xiCue Link QX120 case fans |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard / Corsair Virtuoso XT Wireless RGB |
Power Supply | Corsair RM1000x Shift |
Mouse | Logitech G604s |
Keyboard | Corsair K70 Rapidfire |
Software | Windows 11 x64 Professional |
It's not natively quad core. It just has a larger cache and tweaked core. The Q9300 also has a much higher fsb meaning that the multiplier is lower.
The hell with that native quad core crap. Its just a marketing gimmick. Like SLi RAM. If you really want to look at it that way, which quad core is better? AMD's "native" quad core, or Intel's "double" dual core? Looks like Intel has been the winner. And dont say that Im a "fanboy" either. Because I buy w/e is best at the time of my purchase. My last 5 builds have been AMD.
No matter how you look at it, so long as it is in one processor, it IS a quad core.