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- Apr 30, 2008
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- Multidimensional
System Name | Boomer Master Race |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS APU |
Motherboard | BareBones Mini PC MB |
Cooling | Mini PC Cooling |
Memory | Crucial 32GB 4800MHz |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon 680M 8GB IGPU |
Storage | Crucial 500GB M.2 SSD + 2TB Ext HDD |
Display(s) | Sony 4K Bravia X85J 43Inch TV 120Hz |
Case | Beelink Mini PC Chassis |
Audio Device(s) | Built In Realtek Digital Audio HD |
Power Supply | 120w Power Brick |
Mouse | Logitech G203 Lightsync |
Keyboard | Atrix RGB Slim Keyboard |
VR HMD | ( ◔ ʖ̯ ◔ ) |
Software | Windows 10 Home 64bit |
Benchmark Scores | Don't do them anymore. |
Not much of a gamer are you? Higher CPU clock speeds have been proven time and time again, to have zero effect on gaming, after a certain point. It is the GPU that you want to be faster, not the CPU.
Where do I begin
Yeah I'm not much of a gamer even though I have a decently high end rig:shadedshu and all I do on it is play farmville Also got a Xbox360, PS3, PSVita, Gamecube & PS2 and all I do is stare at them:shadedshu
"Higher CPU clock speeds have been proven time and time again, to have zero effect on gaming"
Well tell that to my i7 920 2.66ghz OCed to 4ghz or my i7 970 3.2ghz OCed to 4ghz or even my old AMD X2 6000+ 3ghz - 3.4ghz which all felt pretty damn smoother when playing 3D applications/games & even in the desktop and they removed any bottlenecks Hell even the PSP got a CPU speed increase, 222mhz - 333mhz Thus the God Of War series came out on it because of that extra speed
Anyways IMO increased CPU speeds do help but they reach a certain point where you're not really getting anything out of it but I do agree with you on the faster GPU