Monday, February 17th 2020
AMD Ryzen ThreadRipper is Capable of Running Crysis without a GPU
AMD has just recently launched its 3rd generation of Ryzen ThreadRipper CPUs, and it is already achieving some impressive stuff. In the world of PC gaming, there used to be a question whenever a new GPU arrives - "But can it run Crysis?". This question became meme over the years as GPU outgrew requirements for the Crysis game, and any GPU nowadays is capable of running the game. However, have you ever wondered if your CPU can run Crysis, alone without a GPU? Me neither, but Linus from LinusTechTips taught of that.
The CPU, of course, can not run any game, as it lacks the hardware for graphics output, but being that AMD's ThreadRipper 3990X, a 64 core/128 thread monster has raw compute power capable of running Crysis, it can process the game. Running in software mode, Linus got the CPU to process the game and run it without any help from a GPU. This alone is a massive achievement for AMD ThreadRipper, as it shows that CPUs reached a point where their raw computing power is on pair with some older GPU and that we can achieve a lot of interesting things. You can watch the video down below.
The CPU, of course, can not run any game, as it lacks the hardware for graphics output, but being that AMD's ThreadRipper 3990X, a 64 core/128 thread monster has raw compute power capable of running Crysis, it can process the game. Running in software mode, Linus got the CPU to process the game and run it without any help from a GPU. This alone is a massive achievement for AMD ThreadRipper, as it shows that CPUs reached a point where their raw computing power is on pair with some older GPU and that we can achieve a lot of interesting things. You can watch the video down below.
56 Comments on AMD Ryzen ThreadRipper is Capable of Running Crysis without a GPU
Besides the "gay" earrings of course.
Earrings are optional.
I've kinda got a kick out of LTT, but ... the guy talks about complicated CPU/Process/Thread/Usage stuff while looking at effing Task Manager, that's just ridicolous.
Everyone in IT knows Task Manager is totally not the tool for any serious performance analysis reading, he terminology across windows versions never completely matched other developer oriented tools from microsoft, the way data is averaged, refreshed would probably have quite a big impact on those CPU Usage graphs, not to mention a per-CPU type of a overview isn't meant to read into more than it's intended for, and because you can't see per-thread activity it's easy to be fooled into the "load balancing" nonsense, where the same thread jumps around many cores creating an illusion that there's more threads "efficiently using the CPU".
Negative of Linus's videos are, they made 5 minute videos into 10 video.
Note the quotation marks.