Interesting.
@ ty ass Intel graphics mother ers playing DOTA, the cheap bas s
Either is probably good for 1-2 years. No such thing as future proof on video cards though, especially since the ones coming out in a few months will be way better.
Interesting.
@ ty ass Intel graphics mother ers playing DOTA, the cheap bas s
Even if an AMD equivalent was able to produce a few more frames, I'm still going Nvidia because it's what I'm used to.. Not to mention I have a G-Sync monitor![]()
Where the are the last two generations of AMD cards on this list?
http://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/videocard/
760 master race still going strong I see
hopefully the sweet spot stays around 300 though, I plan on upgrading this year but don't want drop too much on a card
if ur budget is 1500 max
is a high end AMD system better then intel system? i know amd parts are dirt cheap....
i notice clowns prefer intel cpu over amd...
anyone built a high end amd system yet? fx8350
Last edited by TDMVPDPOY; 01-20-2016 at 07:04 AM.
The FX-8350 is a piece of for gaming. It's like $30 cheaper than a locked i5, the locked i5 performs way better, and the FX-8350 ends up being more expensive because you need a $90 board to run one when an i5 runs fine on a $50-$70 board, and you need to spend at least $25 on a cpu cooler since the stock cooler can't handle it while the stock coolers are fine on i5s. If you overclock the out of the FX-8350 you can make it run games a little better than an i3 but it will almost never touch even the lowest i5s like the i5-4430, i5-4440, and i5-4460.
AMD makes good graphics cards but their cpus are dog .
IMO right now your best bet is to go with an Intel processor, which destroys AMD, and an AMD GPU, which should be better future proofed for DX12 and offers equal/better performance per dollar to Nvidia.
However, the top end card right now is the 980ti without any reservation. It's better than the Fury X. We'll see how DX12 changes things.
Nvidia innovation and support > Better price to performance ratio
Not even going to get into it with you. Nvidia has had their own crop of terrible customer service lately. I have never had a problem with my AMD GPUs since my first card, and will continue to buy from them. Both NVidia cards I had blew themselves up.
I gotta say I was really impressed by that Polaris 10 card AMD showed at CES that uses half the power of a GTX 950 but was still playing Battlefront at the same settings, both locked 60 fps. I really think these 14/16 nm cards coming out in 2016 are going to be a big deal. As tempting as a 980 Ti looks to me right now, I'm just going to wait for Polaris and Pascal.
My God.
I haven't kept up. Are they really doing 14 nm now? that is wild. I wonder what spectra and methodology is involved in the lithography process. I wonder just how much finer the planarization of CMP equipment has to be.
Sometimes I wish I was still an engineering tech doing that. When I left the semiconductor industry, they had 125 nm in production. They are almost 1/10 that now. Oh well, it's been 14 years now.
Intel is actually already on their second generation of 14 nm CPUs, though their first (Broadwell) got delayed about a year and pretty much never launched on desktop (though it's used pretty heavily in mobile). Their second 14 nm generation Skylake chips are incredible though. Their desktop quadcores dropped from 84W to 65W and they all overclock like madmen on average, even on the stock cooler.
Finally getting ready to pull the trigger, now that Xmas is over, and I got a new, higher paying job. (Flood set family back quite a bit, having to replace cars, had to delay a bit)
Any updates?
... going to have to spend a few hours reading this thread to catch up. Solid gold in terms of information needed.
Actually, there is a pretty big update. Right now you can overclock any Intel Skylake processor with a few different models of AsRock and MSI Z170 boards. There are official BIOS out to do oldschool BCLK overclocking like you used to need to do in the 90s and early 2000s before unlocked multipliers became a thing with Intel's K-series processors and AMD's FX. There are some downsides to it, namely AVX instructions won't execute with the BCLK raised from the stock 100 MHz, so BCLK overclocking isn't a good idea for for any kind of workstation use since AVX can be pretty important there. However games don't usually don't use AVX instructions, so that's not a concern at all for a straight gaming system. Another downside is you lose the ability to accurately measure your cpu's temperature. So you should absolutely never go above 1.3V vcore doing Skylake BCLK overclocking. Probably the biggest downside is you're going to have to really get your hands dirty in the BIOS doing BCLK overclocking. This type of old-school overclock is only viable on Skylake right now since they decoupled the PCIE clock from the CPU's base clock. On Haswell and before you couldn't go much higher than maybe 103 MHz - 105 MHz base clock since you could cause all sorts of errors with your GPU, but now that's been eliminated. But the memory clock is still tied to the CPU's base clock, so you have to be comfortable adjusting multipliers and timings in memory with Skylake base clock overclocking.
If you're interested in a really crazy bang for you buck system, check this article:
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/di...be-overclocked
Something like an i5-6500 with an AsRock Z170 Pro4S board, 2x8GB DDR4-2666, and a GTX 970 would make a really strong 1080p gaming rig. I think the 970 tends to be better in single player games with lots of AI and since Nvidia's DX11 drivers have a lot less overhead than AMD's. If you're into multiplayer games the AMD R9 390 is a lot better though due to being significantly stronger than the 970 on a hardware level. Basically 970 is better if you play games that really use the CPU (so single player open world games with lots of AI like Fallout 4, GTA V, Witcher 3), while the R9 390 kills for stuff like Battlefield and Star Wars Battlefront.
Last edited by baseline bum; 01-26-2016 at 05:45 PM.
I really think Skylake is worth the premium now over Haswell, unless you're doing a Haswell-E build (eg, i7-5820k, i7-5930k, or i7-5960x). DDR4 is significantly faster than DDR3, it overclocks better, and memory speed really matters when you're cpu bound. If you want really simple overclocking though, buy a K-series chip (i5-6600k, i7-6700k, i7-5820k, i7-5930k, or i7-5960x) and overclock via the multiplier. Then you can just buy 2x8GB DDR4-2666 for Skylake and use the XMP profile or 4x4GB DDR4-2400 for Haswell-E and again use the XMP profile for the RAM (you want 2 sticks on Skylake since it's dual channel, four for Haswell-E since it's quad channel).
Also the i3-6100 is an incredibly powerful budget gaming CPU. Now that you can do BCLK overclocking with some AsRock and MSI Z170 boards it might be the best budget gaming CPU made since maybe the Celeron 300A.
u guys know inside the ssd case, the pcb is only like 1/3 the size of the case, and the storage flash chip is a size of a coin...
so u telling me they cant built a ssd with a pcb that fits that whole case and just fit as much storage flash chips onto it and put a price on it?
ive notice there is 2tb ssd out now...
what monitor u have? no point investing in a high end gaming pc, and ur playing on some TN monitor 5ms 60mhz bull
the money u save by buying a lower kchip and overclocking it...u still need some decent cooling system....
You can actually use the stock cooler fine with the locked Skylake i5 and i3 when BLCK overclocking them. All the normal heat you generate stress testing the overclocks isn't there because of the AVX instructions being disabled when you do BCLK overclocking on Skylake.
baseline bum, @wildcobra, Cry Havoc
when it comes to gaming monitor and budget, u can only select one base on the limitations of ur video card
gsync monitor with 1440 or 4k monitor?
im looking for a good +27' 1440 monitor with gsync...any of u clowns using a 1440 monitor? or 4k?
Gsync is for nvidia. Freesync is with AMD.
I'd strongly perfer that considering most systems can't handle 4k atm. If you have a frame rate dropping, it'll look a lot smoother on a freesync monitor.
1440p, 4k, and gsync are three words you never associate with a budget system.
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