hardcore_gamer29
Senior member
will i5 10th generation be enough for heaviest games or should i choose i7
@HardWarrior
Demand is so high for new-gen hardware (Vermeer, RDNA2, Ampere) that it's hard to recommend anything new. If you are happy with what you have then just keep rolling with that until you start seeing unacceptable performance in your eyes.
Honestly I can't think of any current titles that will truly tax your system, with the possible exception of MS flight sim 2020.
ok so i am getting upgrade on 25th of this month what i have chosen so far:The thing is, even NVidia GPUs have PCI-E 4.0 now (with Ampere line-up). And only AMD offers a consumer platform with PCI-E 4.0 support. So if you want to play @ 4K60, then you're going to want something with PCI-E 4.0, IMHO, alongside an Ampere (or Big Navi) card. Intel won't have PCI-E 4.0 on a consumer platform until Rocket Lake, which likely won't be until 2021. Plus, I heard in a HardwareUnboxed video, or maybe it was GamersNexus, that many of those so-called "PCI-E 4.0 Ready" Z490 boards on the market right now, may not, in fact, turn out to be fully PCI-E 4.0 "ready" (*) for Rocket Lake, and that a new generation ("Z590?") chipset will be announced corresponding with Rocket Lake release, which will be fully "PCI-E 4.0 Certified" on Intel platform. But again, you'll have to wait until some time in 2021, most likely, for that to happen.
(*) Remember many years ago, when many consumer PCs were sold with Windows 98se/ME/2000, as "Vista Ready". And yet, they weren't. Yeah, that.