- Joined
- Jul 28, 2008
- Messages
- 3,300 (0.56/day)
System Name | Primary|Secondary|Poweredge r410|Dell XPS|SteamDeck |
---|---|
Processor | i7 11700k|i7 9700k|2 x E5620 |i5 5500U|Zen 2 4c/8t |
Memory | 32GB DDR4|16GB DDR4|16GB DDR4|32GB ECC DDR3|8GB DDR4|16GB LPDDR5 |
Video Card(s) | RX 7800xt|RX 6700xt |On-Board|On-Board|8 RDNA 2 CUs |
Storage | 2TB m.2|512GB SSD+1TB SSD|2x256GBSSD 2x2TBGB|256GB sata|512GB nvme |
Display(s) | 50" 4k TV | Dell 27" |22" |3.3"|7" |
VR HMD | Samsung Odyssey+ | Oculus Quest 2 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro|Windows 10 Pro|Windows 10 Home| Server 2012 r2|Windows 10 Pro |
Being 4% behind doesn't mean that it can't run the current software.I think it's you who's missing the point.
If you buy a CPU today, you buy it to run software that exists today. By the time software will be "optimized" in any significant amount, all CPUs you can buy today will be obsolete.
Try running something parallel while gaming on both i5 7500 and R5 1600 and let me know how it goes.
The point is doesn't take a lot to optimize for Ryzen.
AoS patch was done in two weeks more or less with Dota.
Those 4% can swing only in Ryzen direction due to multithreading or code optimization.