- Jul 16, 2003
- 424
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I've been putting off upgrading for over a week now because I can't make a decision. Should I get the 3700+ San Diego or get the X2 3800+. I'm worried that I'm going to run into those issues people are having with games like having to set the affinity and all that other crap everytime you load up a game. What a hassle. What I find strange though is I can't find a single reputable review site like Anandtech who can corroborate these issues which makes me think people are having these issues because they don't know what they're doing and have their system setup wrong. I could totally be mistaken on that but I don't understand why there aren't any articles about it.
Games I will or will be playing in the future: CS:S, Quake 4, Quake Wars, AoE 3, Serious Sam 2. All I'll be doing on the new system is gaming and pretty much nothing else except maybe winamp and web browsing. My old system (the one I'm on now) will be doing all the DVD burning, file serving, web browsing, etc.. Specs of old system:
P4 3.0C
Asus P4C800-E Deluxe
Radeon 9800 Pro 128mb
Fortron 400W PSU
OCZ PC3700 Gold Rev.2
WD 80GB SE 7200RPM w/8mb cache
Pioneer DVD-RW DVR-105
Sony DVD-ROM
I realize the majority of people are going to say get the X2 just because it's the newest thing. I need reasons more than that. Ideally, gamers who have already gone dual core will be able to answer my question best whether it's worth it or not. Everytime I compare the two processors on paper, the 3700+ looks like the better choice because it has 1mb cache, a higher stock clock speed, possibly higher overclock potential, it's over $100 bucks cheaper, and the games I'll be playing now or in the near future aren't multithreaded. Now on the other hand with an X2 I can encode while playing a game simoultaneously which a real gamer would never do in the first place, it's a little more future proof for games that come out with support for it toward the end of 2006 as quoted from one of the most renowned game programmers in the world Tim Sweeney.
Fact is comparison between these two processors on paper should make my choice easy but it isn't. Please, any gamers or the like with experience help me make a decision.
Games I will or will be playing in the future: CS:S, Quake 4, Quake Wars, AoE 3, Serious Sam 2. All I'll be doing on the new system is gaming and pretty much nothing else except maybe winamp and web browsing. My old system (the one I'm on now) will be doing all the DVD burning, file serving, web browsing, etc.. Specs of old system:
P4 3.0C
Asus P4C800-E Deluxe
Radeon 9800 Pro 128mb
Fortron 400W PSU
OCZ PC3700 Gold Rev.2
WD 80GB SE 7200RPM w/8mb cache
Pioneer DVD-RW DVR-105
Sony DVD-ROM
I realize the majority of people are going to say get the X2 just because it's the newest thing. I need reasons more than that. Ideally, gamers who have already gone dual core will be able to answer my question best whether it's worth it or not. Everytime I compare the two processors on paper, the 3700+ looks like the better choice because it has 1mb cache, a higher stock clock speed, possibly higher overclock potential, it's over $100 bucks cheaper, and the games I'll be playing now or in the near future aren't multithreaded. Now on the other hand with an X2 I can encode while playing a game simoultaneously which a real gamer would never do in the first place, it's a little more future proof for games that come out with support for it toward the end of 2006 as quoted from one of the most renowned game programmers in the world Tim Sweeney.
Fact is comparison between these two processors on paper should make my choice easy but it isn't. Please, any gamers or the like with experience help me make a decision.
