It's time for a writeup.
I wasn't entirely happy with how vendors were continuing to treat mATX as an exclusively budget form factor. Maybe I'm still salty about the Gene or the better boards being relegated to B560 instead of Z590. Or maybe I'm just pissed off about the TUF colour scheme ruining the entire aesthetic especially since the Cerberus isn't a cheap case and the 5900X isn't a cheap CPU.
But most likely: all of these are just really weak excuses for masking the fact that I really just wanted a hardware upgrade
-----------------------------------------------
Board:
Don't suppose the Unify-X needs any introduction. Until EVGA decides to show up 2+ years late with its X570S Dark, it remains the only full sized AM4 2DIMMer. I really love the aesthetic, and just didn't want a 4DIMM board if I'm literally only ever using a dual rank 2DIMM kit.
The VRM is so unbelievably overkill - it's basically impossible for the VRM to break a sweat with the 5900X. I don't think I've ever seen the VRM over 45C. Coming from ITX and mATX, there's so many fan headers everywhere..................gone are the days of having to Y-splitter two fans together and then extend them to reach a fan header halfway across the board.
M.2 heatsinks are good. Thoughtful of MSI to place two layers of thermal pads under them - if you have a single-sided drive you can leave both there, if you have a double-sided drive you remove one layer and save it for future use.
-----------------------------------------------
RAM:
On paper, there's not a lot to gain going from 2x16GB CJR @ 3600 16-19-19 to 2x16GB B-die @ 3600 14-14-14 aside from a lot of $$$. The CJR could do 3733 16-19-19 below 1.4V, and the B-die does 3600 14-14-14 tightened at 1.42V and 3800 14-15-15 tightened at 1.5V. The B-die cost 69% (giggity) more than the CJR and sure as hell doesn't provide 69% (giggity) more perf.
Howeveeeeeeeeeeeeeeerrrrrrrr............ever since I got MW2019 bundled with my 2060 Super that I bought in 2019, I've been plagued by this thing:
This thing is supposed to indicate "packet loss". That's horseshit, there's nothing wrong with my internet, playing a custom bot game changes nothing. Whenever the icon shows, there's very real stuttering and frame skipping. The frame skipping strictly coincides only with certain animations - firing first bullet in a mag, initating a slide, racking the bolt on a new weapon picked up, smoke grenade for the weapon drop feature, very specific point in the inspect animation.
Things I have tried to fix the very systematic stuttering:
- Changing CPUs (3700X/5900X), boards (B450I Aorus Pro Wifi, B550I Aorus AX, B550M TUF), GPUs (1070, 2060 Super)
- Changing GPU drivers, AGESA and BIOS
- Changing CPU overclocks, changing RAM overclocks
- Changing power supplies
- Purported life hacks in the config files for the game in Documents, deleting Documents folder for game
- Reinstalling shaders
- Changing game graphics settings
- Reinstalling game
- Reinstalling Windows
- Moving to a different SSD
- Running no background tasks or monitoring
- Running at full fan speed
Whether the game decides to stutter one day is completely up to chance. If it starts, there is no way to make it go away (it persists after restarting PC and restarting game), except to bear it out until it naturally goes away in about 10 minutes of gameplay.
The B-die has finally fixed all of that. No more stuttering and frame skipping. Not. One. Bit. It doesn't matter if I'm at XMP or on one of my profiles, 3600CL14 or 3733CL14 or 3800CL14.
Crazy, yeah? Who woulda thunk it?
There are also smoothness/consistency gains in other games as well, just not quite as blatant as in MW. I guess the benefits of RAM really can't be dismissed just because they aren't represented in a nice neat bar graph, unlike what some Youtube channels seem to think.
-----------------------------------------------
Case:
I think I've said too much about the Cerberus X at this point. It's a bigger Cerberus that fits high-end motherboards. ATX is good.
-----------------------------------------------