- Joined
- Oct 29, 2010
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System Name | Old Fart / Young Dude |
---|---|
Processor | 2500K / 6600K |
Motherboard | ASRock P67Extreme4 / Gigabyte GA-Z170-HD3 DDR3 |
Cooling | CM Hyper TX3 / CM Hyper 212 EVO |
Memory | 16 GB Kingston HyperX / 16 GB G.Skill Ripjaws X |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte GTX 1050 Ti / INNO3D RTX 2060 |
Storage | SSD, some WD and lots of Samsungs |
Display(s) | BenQ GW2470 / LG UHD 43" TV |
Case | Cooler Master CM690 II Advanced / Thermaltake Core v31 |
Audio Device(s) | Asus Xonar D1/Denon PMA500AE/Wharfedale D 10.1/ FiiO D03K/ JBL LSR 305 |
Power Supply | Corsair TX650 / Corsair TX650M |
Mouse | Steelseries Rival 100 / Rival 110 |
Keyboard | Sidewinder/ Steelseries Apex 150 |
Software | Windows 10 / Windows 10 Pro |
This is a marketing smokescreen by AMD. The funny/sad part is that they present the FX as the ultimate gaming chip and they fail to confirm this in all those slides. Comparisons are made with their own Phenom and a general presentation comparing it with an Intel last gen chip (by the way, discontinued) which is proven to be under the current Sandy Bridge generation in gaming. Furthermore we don't know if they used an xfire setup or a medium class single GPU since this might alter drastically the results.
Anyway, BD has to be better than Phenom II x6 otherwise what's the purpose? It's 315 mm2 die size compared to Sandy's 216 mm2 (on which we also have an IGP) should provide some performance, isn't it?
Anyway, BD has to be better than Phenom II x6 otherwise what's the purpose? It's 315 mm2 die size compared to Sandy's 216 mm2 (on which we also have an IGP) should provide some performance, isn't it?