Tuli vain sellainen tunneMitä se sinulle kuuluu?
Tuli vain sellainen tunneMitä se sinulle kuuluu?
You mean not at 360p like Anand used?That is because TPU are testing with GPU limited settings so the spread is reduced.
Well, i dont game at 720p, so.......As long as someone is happy using 8700K over 10700K or 10900K there no need to look at Zen 3 either.
The 8700k is 10% slower than 5800X in the 720p aggregate gaming bench.
Those super low resolutions are basically a cache and memory benchmark, both of which were stacked in favor of Zen 3; the cache being acceptable because it's inherent to the uarch, but the memory not so much. Any consumer who buys Intel can overclock them and run the memory at 3600MHZ+ for instant and significant performance. That is what most real world gamers do. This attempt on your part to make a whole bunch of noise over resolutions no one plays at is hilarious. The shoe is on the other foot, so all of a sudden, 720p is the new 1440p.We all know that but certain people were pushing very hard the super low res. testing as it *should* show which uarchitecture has more potential and brings less CPU bottleneck. Now the tables are turned and Zen3 pummels intel in the ground in 720p and lower - just check AT review and 384p numbers, it's sad![]()
Real world gamers buy stuff that runs at jedec specs, plug the thing to a 1080p monitor and play.Those super low resolutions are basically a cache and memory benchmark, both of which were stacked in favor of Zen 2; the cache being acceptable because it's inherent to the uarch, but the memory not so much. Any consumer who buys Intel can overclock them and run the memory at 3600MHZ+ for instant and significant performance. That is what most real world gamers do. This attempt on your part to make a whole bunch of noise over resolutions no one plays at is hilarious. The shoe is on the other foot, so all of a sudden, 720p is the new 1440p.![]()
Real world gamers buy stuff that runs at jedec specs, plug the thing to a 1080p monitor and play.
And RAM is shipped in systems that run at jedec specs for the ultra vast majority.I doubt that, given that XMP is Intel's own standard.
Those super low resolutions are basically a cache and memory benchmark, both of which were stacked in favor of Zen 3; the cache being acceptable because it's inherent to the uarch, but the memory not so much. Any consumer who buys Intel can overclock them and run the memory at 3600MHZ+ for instant and significant performance. That is what most real world gamers do. This attempt on your part to make a whole bunch of noise over resolutions no one plays at is hilarious. The shoe is on the other foot, so all of a sudden, 720p is the new 1440p.![]()
And RAM is shipped in systems that run at jedec specs for the ultra vast majority.
As I said, Average Joe doesn't even know what a bios is.OEMs, yes. They will stick with JEDEC. But if you are talking DIY I would expect XMP to be turned on. It's not a big deal and pretty much guaranteed to work unlike overclocking.
The 720p results he showed both have the Zen 3 systems running higher memory speeds. That's my point. Run all systems at the same speed and run the 720p tests again and watch the Intel systems do significantly better. 384p? Assuming we should even take that seriously, Zen 3 could probably fit a whole lot of the data in cache, and those that don't will go to a faster memory? TPU tested all systems with same memory speed in the 720p test, albeit with a 2080Ti, and the results were very different.Core overclocking on Intel systems provided minimal benefits now as well. It only really helps with lower end dies - like the 10600K, and still doesn't allow them to beat the 10900K stock with the same memory.
You mention running the memory at 3600MHz+ on Intel, but you do realise that's also possible on Zen 3 systems? Furthermore, that is EXACTLY what Gamers Nexus and LTT have both done for both Intel and AMD systems - GN uses tuned memory at specific timings they standardise across all systems, and their the both of their Zen 3 results are amongst the most positive. Both also tested at 1080p high or ultra settings as far as I remember, so the "720p isn't real world" (which mind you, I agree with) don"t matter.
No matter how you may wish to cut it, Intel have lost the gaming crown for the time being. Not sure how you can argue otherwise at this point.
As I said, Average Joe doesn't even know what a bios is.
You're more than welcome to admit true gaming performance should be evaluated at higher resolutions, as long as that comes with the obvious admission that Zen 2 was within 3% of Skylake at gaming as well.Strange (not really) that low res gaming was so strongly denigrated (niche within a niche comes to mind from one poster) when Intel led more at low res, but now is somehow becoming the holy grail since that appears to be where AMD has the lead.
The 720p results he showed both have the Zen 3 systems running higher memory speeds. That's my point. Run all systems at the same speed and run the 720p tests again and watch the Intel systems do significantly better. 384p? Assuming we should even take that seriously, Zen 3 could probably fit a whole lot of the data in cache, and those that don't will go to a faster memory? TPU tested all systems with same memory speed in the 720p test, albeit with a 2080Ti, and the results were very different.
I remember the opposite. It has always been used as a trouncing card against the gaming viability of Zen CPUs.Well, i dont game at 720p, so.......
Edit: Strange (not really) that low res gaming was so strongly denigrated (niche within a niche comes to mind from one poster) when Intel led more at low res, but now is somehow becoming the holy grail since that appears to be where AMD has the lead.
Also, mind your choice of benchmarks before RKL-S comes in
3. Like I said before, with tuned, equalised memory across both Intel and AMD platforms you have both LTT and GN showing that even at a higher resolution Zen 3 takes a very noticeable lead. So your point about the cache is even more useless.
Send nudes or didn't happen.1. Why are we still talking about TPU's results after TPU themselves said they recognised their results were far off base to what others saw and decided they needed to retest?
Read the user's name backwards(<-) and you will figure it outSend nudes or didn't happen.
Joking aside, I don't think anybody took them seriously until Ondma came in and said triumphantly that the stock 8700K is 3% behind Zen 3.
I've always found the ultra low rez gaming benchmarks to be interesting, if not terribly relevant to current games and systems. More of an amusement than anything really useful.Low res gaming results were used as both PUN and salt in the wounds by reviewers. I'm not sure if it was the intent, but that's the way I'm leaning.
I don't really see any reason to argue about the results as they speak for themselves.
Those arguing against low res gaming most likely were spewing it's importance in the past. Those defending it now most likely were downplaying it's importance in the past.
I wouldn't base my cpu purchasing on low resolution gaming, but it does serve a purpose in the end.
another Spec bench in zhihu by Edison Chen
compiler GCC 10.2 -march=znver2 for AMD, -march=native for Intel, -Ofast and other compatible flag,They are verified on the SPEC tools as a meaningful performance to upload.
third lib Jemalloc 5.21
SPEC CPU 2017 1.1 tune: base, 3 loops
author:Edison Chen
link:https://www.zhihu.com/question/428994199/answer/1561075014
Sourse : zhihu
Is a Noctua NH-U12A adequate for cooling a Ryzen 5800x? I purchased this cooler about 2 weeks ago to be installed in my next rig.
The 5800X runs pretty hot in all-core workloads due to 142W PPT being spread across 8 cores. I'm not sure if the NH-U12A is going to be enough.
Quite happy with my decision to buy a 5900X. Out of the too three Ryzens, it definitely looks like it offers the best perf/value ratio if you plan to keep using your build for a long time.
Eye watering MT performance as well. When a stock 16C/32T Zen3 chip on a dual channel mainstream platform utterly destroys a 4.8Ghz SKL-X 18C/36T with quad ch. memory, it's PG13 content : https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-ryzen-9-5950x-5900x-zen-3-review
Eye watering MT performance as well. When a stock 16C/32T Zen3 chip on a dual channel mainstream platform utterly destroys a 4.8Ghz SKL-X 18C/36T with quad ch. memory, it's PG13 content : https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-ryzen-9-5950x-5900x-zen-3-review