VirtualLarry
No Lifer
- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,587
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Overclock the Pentium, and leaving the 860k at stock seems rather biased as well. It's a decent overclocker after all.
Huh? They had the 860K at 4.4, just like the G3258.
Overclock the Pentium, and leaving the 860k at stock seems rather biased as well. It's a decent overclocker after all.
Huh? They had the 860K at 4.4, just like the G3258.
"Touching on that a little more, the Core i3 isn't really an ideal upgrade. Although it does support four threads thanks to Hyper-Threading, the highest clocked model runs at just 3.8GHz with no Turbo boost, so it won't be much of an upgrade from an overclocked G3258, if at all."
They do install and run on just two cores, and you can even record gameplay,even with a celeron.Yeah, the G3258 is sweet -- never mind that GTA 5 or Far Cry 4 won't even install on it.
An OC'd G3258 has one of the fastest IPC's you can find, but it's dual core and only dual core so no HT like i3 and it'll have its limitations. A G3258 is totally a CPU I'd be using when building a PC for my mother or grandmother or for a guest PC in my house, or such otherwise an i3 would be my choice for lightweight gaming and office use. The Athlon X4... I just don't even consider.
They do install and run on just two cores, and you can even record gameplay,even with a celeron.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tKrlFABd4c FC4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UK0_wOKv-rU GTA V
Yeah, sure.... This must have been a hallucination:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2851...t-to-a-bleak-future-for-budget-pc-gamers.html
The workarounds aren't worth it. Why would anyone want to play with such low detail settings?
Details are dependent on your VGA ,put in something better than an r7-240 and you will get better resolution and detail.The workarounds aren't worth it. Why would anyone want to play with such low detail settings?
The minimums are what will kill you with the G3258.
http://wccftech.com/witcher-3-cpu-benchmarks-fx-63008350-i7-4790ki5-4690ki3-4130g3258-oc/
Core i7 4790K 65.0/84.4
Core i5 4690K 52.0/79.2
Core i3 4130 38.0/68.9
G3258 at 4.5GHz OC 27.0/63.8
FX 8350 56.0/75.2
FX 6300 45.0/69.6
"The first section of the video demonstrates how the same CPU can still drive the Titan X to almost the same degree.
But once we hit 01:12 a tour of Novigrad City on horseback well, then we see some big changes. This area can hit 80% utilisation across all eight threads on a Core i7 4790K! The less powerful the CPU here, the more CPU stutter you encounter. The G3258 overclocked to 4.5GHz doesnt work out too well."
So, is this CPU stutter found in the Novigrad stress test a cause for concern? Well, not really. Most in-game stutter is caused when the CPU not the GPU is the bottleneck (and thats what we are testing here). As long as you pair your more budget-orientated CPU with an appropriate GPU, youll hit the GPU limit first and typically that doesnt cause stutter. And in the case of The Witcher 3, most of the game is GPU-limited (as seen in the first couple of cut-scenes tested here).
Sure some games may stutter in areas, the games like Witcher 3 that are able to handle multiple threads very well but the brute IPC and speed makes up for the lack of cores in most games as the article demonstrates.
Although the G3258 can handle much faster cards in select games, for budget machines (where this CPU belongs) I think the best cards to match up with the G3258 is a 750 Ti or a 260X.
This combination should give a great 1080P experience for most.
That is not good since games are going to 3 real cores and beyond... even an FX 6300 should perform well. But the reality is not that.Games like HT just fine. It has to do more with total execution throughput at this level, and HT provides about 30% or so of one core, making an i3 the functional equivalent of a 2.6 core (gross oversimplification).
Minimums in GTA V are all about how fast your system can shuffle around the huge amounts of data this game needs,it has nothing to do with the CPU per se.At low where the textures are smaller you get a smooth experience even with the cheapest system,look at the video after the 4min mark.Minimums are the real story of playable setups, and the G3258 which I have championed in the past has really struggled in this regard in certain games, GTA V in particular. I don't believe the article featured minimums, I'd revisit it if they update it with such.
No,it provides about 30% more in benches like cinebench,Games like HT just fine. It has to do more with total execution throughput at this level, and HT provides about 30% or so of one core, making an i3 the functional equivalent of a 2.6 core (gross oversimplification).
You always get that on these kind of reviews. Every time a low end dual-core Intel gets reviewed, "it's cr*p for not meeting 60fps in Crysis 3 on Ultra". Meanwhile, low end AMD's at the same price are reviewed on the grounds of "well if you actually look at the most played Steam game statistics, it's like DOTA2, Age of Empires 2 HD, Borderlands 2, Portal 2 and Skyrim, so we'll use those on "low" instead"...Sure someone is gonna buy a $1000 titan and then he's gonna go"hmm what CPU might I combine with that now" and is gonna choose a pentium....
Or as the review you posted said
I was just considering how to take my overclock to the next level. Isn't this why overclocking via bus first, then multiplier is going to provide better results? mispredicted branches get filled fasterThis is true in general for AMD vs Intel, cache flushes are more penalizing on AMD.
Just look at any JIT languages, like Javascript and Java. AMD can massively (even more so than usual) lose to Intel in those situations.
You always get that on these kind of reviews. Every time a low end dual-core Intel gets reviewed, "it's cr*p for not meeting 60fps in Crysis 3 on Ultra". Meanwhile, low end AMD's at the same price are reviewed on the grounds of "well if you actually look at the most played Steam game statistics, it's like DOTA2, Age of Empires 2 HD, Borderlands 2, Portal 2 and Skyrim, so we'll use those on "low" instead"...Same with modern low-end GPU 'reviews' : "This 750Ti / R7 260X will give you 12fps on Ultra at 1440p with 8xMSAA". Some "tech sites" are literally getting dumber by the day...
Well, I did make sure to mention that it was a gross oversimplification, what perhaps should have been mentioned has that HT's effectiveness is highly application dependent. Also, your screenshots are both of a G1820, so it's not clear how they illustrate anything about HT.No,it provides about 30% more in benches like cinebench,
hyperthreading works by utilizing the "leftovers" of a running thread
https://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/performance-insights-to-intel-hyper-threading-technology
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Now look at a 13% thread of cinebench
compared to a 13% thread of a game like gtav
1.46 compared to 0.71
An i3 can actually run two gtav threads at the same time without slowdown,apart from maybe the task schedulers delays.
They just show how many commands, of a core, a benchmark uses and how many a "typical" game might use.Also, your screenshots are both of a G1820, so it's not clear how they illustrate anything about HT.
