- Joined
- Sep 26, 2022
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System Name | G-Station 1.17 FINAL |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5700X3D |
Motherboard | Gigabyte X470 Aorus Gaming 7 WiFi |
Cooling | DeepCool AK620 Digital |
Memory | Asgard Bragi DDR4-3600CL14 2x16GB |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire PULSE RX 7900 XTX |
Storage | 240GB Samsung 840 Evo, 1TB Asgard AN2, 2TB Hiksemi FUTURE-LITE, 320GB+1TB 7200RPM HDD |
Display(s) | Samsung 34" Odyssey OLED G8 |
Case | Thermaltake Level 20 MT |
Audio Device(s) | Astro A40 TR + MixAmp |
Power Supply | Cougar GEX X2 1000W |
Mouse | Razer Viper Ultimate |
Keyboard | Razer Huntsman Elite (Red) |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Word of experience here:Speaking of AM4 platform longevity/upgrade-ability...
I went from an i7 3770k on Z77 to an R5 3600 on X570.
On the same X570, I've since upgraded to an R5 5600, and recently a 5800X3D.
Every "step" was a noticeable step up.
Amusingly, the X3D addressed minimum framerates to a point that it extended the usable-life of my Vega(10) card(s).
From FX-8320E/GTX1070, to R7-2700/GTX1070, to R7-2700/RTX3070, to R5-5600X/RTX3070, to R5-5600X/RX7900XTX, and finally to the current R7-5700X3D/RX7900XTX pair:
By far the greatest jump I did was migrating from the 8320E to the 2700. It was simply a new world. The 2700, though, held the 3070 back HARD hence the 5600X.
The 5700X3D now didn't make much of my games run faster at the high end of the scale, however it is much better at the low end, MUCH smoother most of the time.
PS: when I did jump from AM3+ to AM4, I spared no expense on the motherboard. This X470 Aorus G7 is an absolute champion. Doesn't even have PCIe 4.0 (well, it had shortly in a beta BIOS before being disabled on AMD's command), but I can't say I'd truly feel the difference be it for the GPU or the M.2 SSD's.
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