- Joined
- May 13, 2010
- Messages
- 5,706 (1.12/day)
System Name | RemixedBeast-NX |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Xeon E5-2690 @ 2.9Ghz (8C/16T) |
Motherboard | Dell Inc. 08HPGT (CPU 1) |
Cooling | Dell Standard |
Memory | 24GB ECC |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte Nvidia RTX2060 6GB |
Storage | 2TB Samsung 860 EVO SSD//2TB WD Black HDD |
Display(s) | Samsung SyncMaster P2350 23in @ 1920x1080 + Dell E2013H 20 in @1600x900 |
Case | Dell Precision T3600 Chassis |
Audio Device(s) | Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro 80 // Fiio E7 Amp/DAC |
Power Supply | 630w Dell T3600 PSU |
Mouse | Logitech G700s/G502 |
Keyboard | Logitech K740 |
Software | Linux Mint 20 |
Benchmark Scores | Network: APs: Cisco Meraki MR32, Ubiquiti Unifi AP-AC-LR and Lite Router/Sw:Meraki MX64 MS220-8P |
Wrong. You need a CPU that can stress and unlock all the potential of the graphics card. Bottleneck remember ?
If you ask me the CPU and GPU are the most expensive components and you have to spend as much as you can on both.
Sp they togheter assure you the best gaming experience.
GPUs are also easier to upgrade then CPUs.
Both software and hardware wise. CPU changes trigger more DRM to freak out but GPU changes don't have as much weight.