- Joined
- Mar 27, 2015
- Messages
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- SoCal
System Name | Mainframe |
---|---|
Processor | Core i5 3570K 3.4GHz/4.3GHz Turbo (OC'ed) |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Maximus V Gene |
Cooling | 4 Apevia 120mm Blue LED Fans (Front/Top) + 1 80mm Rear Fan; Corsair Hydro H105 Liquid-Cooler on CPU |
Memory | 32GB Corsair Vengeance 1600MHz DDR3 (Silver, 8GB x 4) |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 4GB GDDR5 GeForce GTX 970 SuperClocked |
Storage | Corsair Neutron 240GB SSD/Seagate Barracuda 1TB 7200RPM |
Display(s) | ASUS 2ms 27"/Dell 5ms ST2310F 23"/60" HDTV (All displays are 1080p) |
Case | Black Corsair Carbide Air 240 Micro-ATX Box Tower |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard Crap |
Power Supply | ThermalTake TR2 700Watt |
Mouse | A-Jazz Wired LED Gaming Mouse |
Keyboard | A-Jazz LED-Backlit Gaming Keyboard |
Software | Windows 10 |
Benchmark Scores | I don't even wanna try yet. |
So this is my first post here, though I've been lurking for years. I am facing an upgrade choice and need some advice. I'm a gamer. I'm trying to get noticeably better gaming performance. A few months ago I upgraded my EVGA GeForce 650 TI SuperSC 1GB to a GeForce 960 GTX SuperSC 2GB, and get much better framerates, but some games, like Crysis 3, Far Cry 4, and even the original Crysis with some heavy mods like Hi Res Foliage, Rygel's Hi Res Texture Pack, and Crysis Expanded bring my system to a crawl at like 17fps when viewing long distances/lots of objects. My current setup is:
-Cheap Gigabyte Micro-ATX Mobo GA-H61MA-D3V
-LGA 1155 Core i5 3570K 3.4GHz/3.8GHz Turbo
-EVGA GeForce 960 GTX SuperSC 2GB
-8GB G.SKILL Ripjaws 1333MHz RAM
-Corsair Neutron 240GB SSD
-Recent new PSU - ThermalTake TR2 700Watt
So my 2 upgrade paths that I see are:
1.
Upgrade Mobo/CPU to a MUCH faster, newer generation:
Mobo: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130801
CPU: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819117369
This option gives the possibility of SLI later (but I would not be able to afford it for awhile, like 6 months to a year), and would cost about $460 or so shipped - but would this make any difference in gaming terms? I'm already not bothering to upgrade the RAM because everyone says that as the MHz goes up in RAM the CAS latency slows to compensate, so RAM speed has no real significant impact on gaming fps.
2.
However, if a 3.8GHz Ivy Bridge i5 is enough for gaming and the Devil's Canyon i7/Mobo combo wouldn't really affect gaming significantly for its price tag and would be a waste of extra money, would it be wiser to just grab a Socket LGA 1155 Mobo that includes SLI functionality, slap the same RAM and i5 3570K CPU into it, then buy a second SuperClocked GTX 960 and run SLI? It would only run me about $330 with these two components:
Mobo: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157293
GPU: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814487091
Ideally of course, I'd like to just buy it all, but I don't have that much cash to burn; I'll already have to buy the components separately for either path I take as it is.
Given the price difference and the prospective performance gains of each option, what do you think would be the better route to keep me gaming smoothly for the next year or two? Any advice would be greatly appreciated... Thanks!
-Cheap Gigabyte Micro-ATX Mobo GA-H61MA-D3V
-LGA 1155 Core i5 3570K 3.4GHz/3.8GHz Turbo
-EVGA GeForce 960 GTX SuperSC 2GB
-8GB G.SKILL Ripjaws 1333MHz RAM
-Corsair Neutron 240GB SSD
-Recent new PSU - ThermalTake TR2 700Watt
So my 2 upgrade paths that I see are:
1.
Upgrade Mobo/CPU to a MUCH faster, newer generation:
Mobo: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130801
CPU: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819117369
This option gives the possibility of SLI later (but I would not be able to afford it for awhile, like 6 months to a year), and would cost about $460 or so shipped - but would this make any difference in gaming terms? I'm already not bothering to upgrade the RAM because everyone says that as the MHz goes up in RAM the CAS latency slows to compensate, so RAM speed has no real significant impact on gaming fps.
2.
However, if a 3.8GHz Ivy Bridge i5 is enough for gaming and the Devil's Canyon i7/Mobo combo wouldn't really affect gaming significantly for its price tag and would be a waste of extra money, would it be wiser to just grab a Socket LGA 1155 Mobo that includes SLI functionality, slap the same RAM and i5 3570K CPU into it, then buy a second SuperClocked GTX 960 and run SLI? It would only run me about $330 with these two components:
Mobo: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813157293
GPU: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814487091
Ideally of course, I'd like to just buy it all, but I don't have that much cash to burn; I'll already have to buy the components separately for either path I take as it is.
Given the price difference and the prospective performance gains of each option, what do you think would be the better route to keep me gaming smoothly for the next year or two? Any advice would be greatly appreciated... Thanks!