- Joined
- Feb 14, 2015
- Messages
- 4 (0.00/day)
System Name | PC - Desktop |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core i7 2600K @ 3.40GHz |
Motherboard | MSI P67A-GD53 (MS-7681) |
Cooling | Be Quiet Pro |
Memory | 16.0GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 799MHz (9-9-9-24) |
Video Card(s) | AORUS NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti (Gigabyte) |
Storage | 119GB M4-CT128M4SSD2 ATA Device (SATA (SSD)) |
Display(s) | ASUS 24" 144Hz |
Case | Generic |
Audio Device(s) | NVIDIA High Definition Audio |
Power Supply | OCZ 850W |
Mouse | Logitech G502 |
Keyboard | AFX Gaming Keyboard |
If it's the system in your specs, it'll run, but you will experience some CPU bottlenecking. Not in all games or at all resolutions, but it's going to happen.
you'll lose a few/several/double digit percent at 1080p, sure. Between the couple % from pcie 2.0 and the notably lower IPC of the sandybridge cpu (even with it overclocked), it will make a difference in most titles. That said, surely you'll still reach 144hz/fps id imagine.
It depends on the game; Some games are just fine with an old 2600K but many are not. Even if the average FPS on old Intel quad cores looks okay, the minimum framerates are really bad compared to newer higher-core count CPUs with more cache and faster RAM. I moved one of my machines from a i7-3770K on DDR3-1600 to an R7 3700X on DDR4-3200 when they came out over a year ago and games that I thought were running okay suddenly ran much more smoothly when the action started getting busy.
Thanks guys,
I been thinking the computer route but there is a big difference (for me) in buying the £700 card compared to buying a whole new computer system plus the 3080 card which knocks it close to approx £1800.
The computer is old yet still plays exceedingly adequately the games I play at 1080p. Comparing my system with friends computers that were brought earlier this year or late 2019 using UserBenchmark my system is beating theirs hands down. Largely due to the 1080ti (oc) but nevertheless its doing the job still but it will certainly depend on the games I choose to play and eventually I will need to throw in the towel and just get a new system.
Meantime my focus is for VR which requires a lot of GPU horse power above all else. I use a RIFT CV1 at present, so my thinking is all I need is like an extra 30/40% increase in FPS and I can play at 90fps which my current VR set is designed to max out at rather than the 45 FPS is tends to default to due to the taxing games (heavy modded SKyrim).
I checked the CPU whilst playing and the cores hover around the 60/70% max mark so I still have some head room plus I helped my cause by over clocking my CPU to 4498.95MHz as well, its been at this clock speed for years (I overclock everything).
I am glad to at least hear that the limitation of the PCIe isn't going to hamper me as much as I was first worried about. Its just about balancing what I need minimum like compared to simply getting a new computer system for the sake of new tech and how many more frames I get over my old tech when I could technically just use a new GPU with old stuff and still gloriously sail in the fast lane with the games I play.