Making you wasting your time reading a CPU benchmark a complete waste of everyone's time. If you don't care which CPU is faster, please, tell me why you'd be looking for CPU benchmarks!
What you said in your post to which I responded didn't read that way, to me. Since you're the one who wrote it, I'll take your word for it. So, you agree that CPU benchmarks should take the GPU's out of the equation, and GPU benchmarks should do the same for the CPU?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To get this back on topic, the answer to the OP's question is as follows. Websites don't write reviews like he's asking to be written for two very important reasons: 1) The people who buy low to mid end CPU's and GPU's are predominantly the same people who would never look on a website for buying information to start with. They mostly rely on the pimple-faced Best Buy employee, for their computer buying advice. 2) Those of us who do in fact know how to use Google, and do so before buying a computer component, would completely ignore a website that tested such low end gear.
No, I never said that either. You are reading too much into this. If I'm looking at a review/benchmark of a new game and I am looking at the cpu section and I see that anything over an old dual core cpu can pull frame frates in excess of 60+ fps minimum, I can conclude that the game is very light on the cpu and that any modern higher clocked quad will perform identically to me (having a 60 hz monitor 60+ fps is useless and impossible to detect). I don't care which cpu is more powerful if either can play the game with no problems. I'm essentially making an argument against those people who say that 768 x 1024 benchmarks are pointless by saying that as long as the framerate is sufficiently low (ie non-optimal) the benchmarks are fine. What is wrong is to claim that the cpu getting 180 fps is somehow better for the person gaming than the cpu getting 130 fps.
What I mean is that this benchmark, showing skyrim shows that both cpus perform the same as seen by the gamer.
On a 60 hz monitor, neither cpu will cause a problem. In essense cpu performance is sufficient and even though the intel cpus perform better that difference is imperceptible without a 120 hz screen.
In contrast to this benchmark
in which the intel cpu clearly performs better. You can notice a difference with 40 fps vs 60 fps.
I agree that cpu benchmarks should take the gpu out of the equation as much as possible and cpu benchmarks should take the gpu out, yes. Benchmarking at a higher resolution is fine though as long as the results are still indicative of performance (should still be 60 fps or higher). To however use a 1080p benchmark that limits the performance to 40 fps because of the gpu limitations should not be done.
The OP has a little bit of a point. Reviews are highly biased toward the high end. I think what he means is how are mid range systems going to perform?
Take something like gw2 for example on a system with a 7770 and an core 2 duo. Someone can look at the cpu benchmarks and conclude that gw2 is really going to die on that cpu. However, gw2 cpu dependance really only occurs when you turn the details up. You can get really high framerates if you turn the settings down (run minimal). However, benchmark websites tend to run the cpu benchmarks at max settings which is good for the top end but ignores the fact that anyone getting 25 fps on their core 2 duo at those settings is probably going to turn something down to get a playable frame rate. Unfortunately these things are not tested at the settings anyone is going to actually run them at.
This is basically a minor argument and given factors such as costs and the relative (much less so) relevance of doing such benchmarks unfeasible.