- Joined
- Aug 21, 2015
- Messages
- 1,723 (0.51/day)
- Location
- North Dakota
System Name | Office |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5600G |
Motherboard | ASUS B450M-A II |
Cooling | be quiet! Shadow Rock LP |
Memory | 16GB Patriot Viper Steel DDR4-3200 |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte RX 5600 XT |
Storage | PNY CS1030 250GB, Crucial MX500 2TB |
Display(s) | Dell S2719DGF |
Case | Fractal Define 7 Compact |
Power Supply | EVGA 550 G3 |
Mouse | Logitech M705 Marthon |
Keyboard | Logitech G410 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 22H2 |
Why bother upgrade to Rocket lake? Adds little benefit tbh. PCIE 4.0? So? Bandwidth of PCIe 3.0 doesn't seem to be bottlenecking current GPU's. And besides PCIE 4.0 X4 NVME's speeds, there is little to no real world performance gain.
So why waste the money in it? Alder lake is anyway end of this year or early next anyway.
If on Skylake or later? Probably no reason at all. This is true EVERY generation; upgrades from a recent* platform hardly ever make sense. But maybe someone's coming from 1155 or AM3 (or earlier!), or starting from scratch. IF choosing an Intel platform and buying new, you've got the choice of 400- or 500-series. May as well go 500 if the price is right.
*For a given value of recent, on which YMMV. KBL is probably the newest arch worth upgrading from, IMO, presuming one's looking for higher core count.