System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
System Name | Best AMD Computer |
---|---|
Processor | AMD 7900X3D |
Motherboard | Asus X670E E Strix |
Cooling | In Win SR36 |
Memory | GSKILL DDR5 32GB 5200 30 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Pulse 7900XT (Watercooled) |
Storage | Corsair MP 700, Seagate 530 2Tb, Adata SX8200 2TBx2, Kingston 2 TBx2, Micron 8 TB, WD AN 1500 |
Display(s) | GIGABYTE FV43U |
Case | Corsair 7000D Airflow |
Audio Device(s) | Corsair Void Pro, Logitch Z523 5.1 |
Power Supply | Deepcool 1000M |
Mouse | Logitech g7 gaming mouse |
Keyboard | Logitech G510 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro 64 Steam. GOG, Uplay, Origin |
Benchmark Scores | Firestrike: 46183 Time Spy: 25121 |
I guess in your world there has not been media about the new BIOS to turn down the power on 14th Gen chips. You can call that emotional if you want but the truth cannot be refuted. That is why you don't post raw power as it would blow your argument into shreds. Just because you didn't sample it does not mean the entire industry is wrong. It is just like how you tell me my 7900X3D is a bad CPU. My other question would be how can you recommend to the OP if you don't know what you are talking about?Literally because I already had an Optimus AMD waterblock so going to AM5 was a little cheaper, rather than buying new watercooling parts moving from AM4 to LGA 1700. AM5 was an experiment I learned from, Intel it is for the next build. Same goes for other professionals I know who I won't name.
But honestly, you need to stop using emotional arguments "love" "fanboy" etc. it's tedious to read and doesn't make you come off as informed.
Here you go. From the 7800X3D review, since you love bringing that CPU up as if it's magic.
View attachment 348471
Something you might notice is that the last gen (Alder Lake) non K parts top efficiency charts. It just so happens that TPU hasn't reviewed Raptor Lake parts that aren't K series 600K/700K/900K since they weren't sampled this time around, but has reviewed the non X AMD parts, which are equivalent, lower clocked tuned for efficiency. Hence why those SKUs along with X3D parts (similar story, undervolted underclocked, but in this case due to cache voltage sensitivity) cause AMD to look so good in "efficiency" charts (100% all core synthetic load is not a typical use case BTW).
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
"truth" "to shreds" "don't know what you are talking about"I guess in your world there has not been media about the new BIOS to turn down the power on 14th Gen chips. You can call that emotional if you want but the truth cannot be refuted. That is why you don't post raw power as it would blow your argument into shreds. Just because you didn't sample it does not mean the entire industry is wrong. It is just like how you tell me my 7900X3D is a bad CPU. My other question would be how can you recommend to the OP if you don't know what you are talking about?
System Name | Dark Palimpsest |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i9 13900k with Optimus Foundation Block |
Motherboard | EVGA z690 Classified |
Cooling | MO-RA3 420mm Custom Loop |
Memory | G.Skill 6000CL30, 64GB |
Video Card(s) | Nvidia 4090 FE with Heatkiller Block |
Storage | 3 NVMe SSDs, 2TB-each, plus a SATA SSD |
Display(s) | Gigabyte FO32U2P (32" QD-OLED) , Asus ProArt PA248QV (24") |
Case | Be quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 |
Audio Device(s) | Logitech G Pro X |
Power Supply | Be quiet! Straight Power 12 1200W |
Mouse | Logitech G502 X |
Keyboard | GMMK Pro + Numpad |
I took dgianstefani's list (which I don't have complaints about), but just tried to see what an AMD (and more white) build looks like:Here, I fixed your build.
[snip]
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
It's a nice list but that PSU doesn't have a native 12+4 pin cable. You'd have to use an adapter with the 4070 Ti Super, it also isn't ATX 3.0/3.1 spec. Not a huge issue since the 4070 Ti Super is very efficient, being only a 290 W card with spikes to ~350 W, but it's still a concern, and will somewhat limit future GPU upgrades.I took dgianstefani's list (which I don't have complaints about), but just tried to see what an AMD (and more white) build looks like:
https://pt.pcpartpicker.com/list/hrnjVW
7800X3D
Deepcool AK620
ASRock X670E Steel Legend
Teamgroup 2x16GB DDR5 6000 CAS30
WD SN770 2TB
Inno3D Twin X2 OC 4070 Ti Super
Fractal Torrent Compact White
SeaSonic Focus GX 850W
Total: €2219.12
So pretty much the same price and it's more white. This was not done to dispute any of the other points made in the thread, just having some fun with PCPartPicker and selecting an AMD rig as I hadn't seen anybody do that for the full price comparison yet. The only thing not white is the power supply and the cables for it. You can get the MSI MAG A850L PCIE5 that's white, but I don't think I could bring myself to buy an MSI (or Gigabyte) power supply. Check reviews, maybe that one is ok, but I haven't looked into those in a bit. I'd always check reviews for everything before buying it, but power supplies can take down everything else in the system when they go, so I don't like to skimp on those. I have had great luck with SeaSonic, Super Flower, EVGA (older ones of specific models, but can't recommend now), Be Quiet!, and Corsair (these aren't in any particular order and there are other ones that are fine, these are just the ones I personally know have a long history of high quality in their better supplies).
System Name | Dark Palimpsest |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i9 13900k with Optimus Foundation Block |
Motherboard | EVGA z690 Classified |
Cooling | MO-RA3 420mm Custom Loop |
Memory | G.Skill 6000CL30, 64GB |
Video Card(s) | Nvidia 4090 FE with Heatkiller Block |
Storage | 3 NVMe SSDs, 2TB-each, plus a SATA SSD |
Display(s) | Gigabyte FO32U2P (32" QD-OLED) , Asus ProArt PA248QV (24") |
Case | Be quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 |
Audio Device(s) | Logitech G Pro X |
Power Supply | Be quiet! Straight Power 12 1200W |
Mouse | Logitech G502 X |
Keyboard | GMMK Pro + Numpad |
Fair enough (Edit: I was definitely trying to save a few bucks there and just stuck with a brand I'm more comfortable with). That'd be one more reason to look at reviews for the white MSI one I linked, as it's got that connector on it. hwbusters gave it a pretty good rating for a budget supply. Could be better, but doesn't seem dangerous as far as they could tell, so maybe it's fine.It's a nice list but that PSU doesn't have a native 12+4 pin cable. You'd have to use an adapter with the 4070 Ti Super, it also isn't ATX 3.0/3.1 spec. Not a huge issue since the 4070 Ti Super is very efficient, being only a 290 W card with spikes to ~350 W, but it's still a concern, and will somewhat limit future GPU upgrades.
An ATX12VO or even better a 12V-2x6 connection like in the list I made is borderline essential for new builds going forward IMO.
Seasonic make great PSUs but I just wouldn't put a 2019 non ATX 3/3.1 unit in a new high end build.
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASRock X670E Taichi |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 Chromax |
Memory | 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30 |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 4090 Trio |
Storage | P5800X 1.6TB 4x 15.36TB Micron 9300 Pro 4x WD Black 8TB M.2 |
Display(s) | Acer Predator XB3 27" 240 Hz |
Case | Thermaltake Core X9 |
Audio Device(s) | JDS Element IV, DCA Aeon II |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime Titanium 850w |
Mouse | PMM P-305 |
Keyboard | Wooting HE60 |
VR HMD | Valve Index |
Software | Win 10 |
Literally because I already had an Optimus AMD waterblock so going to AM5 was a little cheaper, rather than buying new watercooling parts moving from AM4 to LGA 1700. AM5 was an experiment I learned from, Intel it is for the next build. Same goes for other professionals I know who I won't name.
But honestly, you need to stop using emotional arguments "love" "fanboy" etc. it's tedious to read and doesn't make you come off as informed.
Here you go. From the 7800X3D review, since you love bringing that CPU up as if it's magic.
View attachment 348471
Something you might notice is that the last gen (Alder Lake) non K parts top efficiency charts. It just so happens that TPU hasn't reviewed Raptor Lake parts that aren't K series 600K/700K/900K since they weren't sampled this time around, but has reviewed the non X AMD parts, which are equivalent, lower clocked tuned for efficiency. Hence why those SKUs along with X3D parts (similar story, undervolted underclocked, but in this case due to cache voltage sensitivity) cause AMD to look so good in "efficiency" charts (100% all core synthetic load is not a typical use case BTW).
(100% all core synthetic load is not a typical use case BTW).
Third party motherboard vendors doing their own thing out of Intel specs
It's a nice list but that PSU doesn't have a native 12+4 pin cable. You'd have to use an adapter with the 4070 Ti Super, it also isn't ATX 3.0/3.1 spec. Not a huge issue since the 4070 Ti Super is very efficient, being only a 290 W card with spikes to ~350 W,
but it's still a concern, and will somewhat limit future GPU upgrades.
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
Still conveniently ignoring that high end non K Intel Raptor Cove parts aren't on that list I see. Despite X3D/non X AMD chips being there (and leading in efficiency to the surprise of noone).Great, low-end last gen and mid-range 2gen old Intel CPUs are more efficient when you aren't using your PC.
That's about the only time you are going to be using one thread. How does your chart apply to the topic? It doesn't, you are off topic and derailing the thread as usual. OP isn't looking one or two gen old Intel CPUs and they would bottleneck his GPU choice anyways. Here is that same chart but with CPUs relevant to the discussion:
View attachment 348475
Now let's actually look at charts that demonstrate power consumption in scenarios the OP actually intends to use the PC in:
View attachment 348476
View attachment 348477
These charts echo the broader concensous that AMD is more power efficient.
It demonstrates CPU power consumption when fully loaded. You can't tout the core advantage of Intel without coming to the realization that in order to utlize that core advantage you will be at an large disadvantage when it comes to power consumption.
Mind you it doesn't have to be full load, the 7800X3D is a whopping 229% more efficient in gaming workloads.
Intel is on record in a statement to GN that motherboard vendors were in spec, mostly because Intel didn't really define much of a spec in the first place. Intel only introduced the baseline profile very recently, a total of 7-8 months after launch and only after instability was reported. It'd be one thing if this was at product launch but 7-8 months later? Even if we assume that Intel had some sort of spec it has not made public, that would without a doubt be negligence on their part to allow nearly all their vendors violate the specs for such a long period of time. It is beyond a stretch to call it the partner's fault given the facts.
ATX 3.1 is more of a downgrade than an upgrade:
ATX 3.0 is just the 12VHPWR / 12V2X6 cable, which you don't need because adapters exist. It's a terrible design with low safety margins and should be replaced
Having multiple regular 8-pins from the PSU side going into the adapter is less of a concern. All having an 12v2X6 on the PSU side does is introduce another point of failure for a connector with low safety tolerances.
In what way does it limit future GPU upgrades?
Irrelevant, since both ATX 3.0 and 3.1 are better than ATX 2.x.ATX 3.1 is more of a downgrade than an upgrade:
Yes, the 80% consumer marketshare NVIDIA has or the 90%+ datacentre marketshare, where products for the past three generations have used this or a similar connector, yet where are the burned down houses?ATX 3.0 is just the 12VHPWR / 12V2X6 cable, which you don't need because adapters exist. It's a terrible design with low safety margins and should be replaced
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Apex Encore |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
Memory | 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA RTX A2000 |
Storage | 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD |
Display(s) | 55-inch LG G3 OLED |
Case | Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition |
Power Supply | EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Microsoft Classic IntelliMouse (2017) |
Keyboard | IBM Model M type 1391405 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 22H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
I this board. It's like Roman gladiators but with techies.
System Name | HTPC whhaaaat? |
---|---|
Processor | 2600k @ 4500mhz |
Motherboard | Asus Maximus IV gene-z gen3 |
Cooling | Noctua NH-C14 |
Memory | Gskill Ripjaw 2x4gb |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 1080 FTW @ 2037/11016 |
Storage | 2x512GB MX100/1x Agility 3 128gb ssds, Seagate 3TB HDD |
Display(s) | Vizio P 65'' 4k tv |
Case | Lian Li pc-c50b |
Audio Device(s) | Denon 3311 |
Power Supply | Corsair 620HX |
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
I agree, however sometimes people want to see what the options are right now, and the thread has done a good job of showing those.Now, truly, is a bad time to build a PC. Computex is literally in a couple weeks, in which the whole landscape/thought-process may change depending upon what happens there (and pricing of new/old parts).
Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASRock X670E Taichi |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 Chromax |
Memory | 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30 |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 4090 Trio |
Storage | P5800X 1.6TB 4x 15.36TB Micron 9300 Pro 4x WD Black 8TB M.2 |
Display(s) | Acer Predator XB3 27" 240 Hz |
Case | Thermaltake Core X9 |
Audio Device(s) | JDS Element IV, DCA Aeon II |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime Titanium 850w |
Mouse | PMM P-305 |
Keyboard | Wooting HE60 |
VR HMD | Valve Index |
Software | Win 10 |
Still conveniently ignoring that high end non K Intel Raptor Cove parts aren't on that list I see. Despite X3D/non X AMD chips being there (and leading in efficiency to the surprise of noone).
Reminder that the vast majority of system power on time is light workloads or intermittent loads then back to idle.
For gaming I don't think a CPU using ~30-60 W more (assuming a 4090 with uncapped framerate, not a 60 FPS target) is going to kill the user from heatstroke and send their power bill to the moon, despite what you may want to imply with percentages.
Yes, the 80% consumer marketshare NVIDIA has or the 90%+ datacentre marketshare, where products for the past three generations have used this or a similar connector, yet where are the burned down houses?
Your comment is factually wrong too BTW, ATX 3.0 is not just the PCIE5/12VHPWR cable, it's a thorough spec that requires units to tolerate spikes up to 200% of rated power etc, amongst many other things.
A whole 1.4% of gaming performance lost by halving the power limit to 125 W, or 0.2% by limiting to 200 W. For those reading, that's how a non K Raptor Cove core CPU would perform.
One setting in the bios.
Also important to note that the non K chips have different V/F curves, so they perform slightly better than simply power limiting a K part, since it's a different V/F curve, so these charts are understating the impact having non K chips on efficiency charts to contrast with their counterpart non X/X3D parts (tuned for efficiency out of the box).
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
See post #59. Voltage limited parts are more efficient. Whether that's due to X3D cache voltage intolerance, non X/non K variants or simply power limiting a K series chip, efficiency improves as voltage is limited. If the deciding factor for you is efficiency, power limit a 14900K to 35 W and you have the most efficient desktop x86 CPU on the planet, it takes about 30 seconds. But the reality is performance is what matters, and +/- 50 W on the CPU side of things when gaming isn't really what people care about, as marketshare would indicate.I very much doubt they'll change the fact that X3D parts are more efficient.
Ah, and you are representative of the average computer using person? Gaming is the minority of computer usage, PC gamers are the minority of gamers, people who game while running handbrake 24/7 (if they indeed exist) are the minority of PC gamers.Is it? My system is almost always running handbrake with other background programs? Your statement would also hold false for anyone gaming or streaming as well.
3 watts huh? The blue bars are total idle system power draw. Seems more like 40 W if we don't make up numbers. Zen 4 drastically increased the minimum system power draw over Zen 3.It's pretty much only valid for people who leave their system idling for long periods of time or only do light work. The problem with that is those workloads are going to have a small power consumption regardless of if you go Intel or AMD. The Intel might be 3 watts more efficient at idle but 60-100w worse in gaming. It doesn't take long for that 3w idle advantage to be completely dwarfed by the energy expended when you are actually using your PC's power.
System Name | HTPC whhaaaat? |
---|---|
Processor | 2600k @ 4500mhz |
Motherboard | Asus Maximus IV gene-z gen3 |
Cooling | Noctua NH-C14 |
Memory | Gskill Ripjaw 2x4gb |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 1080 FTW @ 2037/11016 |
Storage | 2x512GB MX100/1x Agility 3 128gb ssds, Seagate 3TB HDD |
Display(s) | Vizio P 65'' 4k tv |
Case | Lian Li pc-c50b |
Audio Device(s) | Denon 3311 |
Power Supply | Corsair 620HX |
I agree, however sometimes people want to see what the options are right now, and the thread has done a good job of showing those.
My attitude is new parts don't magically make the old ones slower, so a 4080 like you said is still a benchmark card for high end gaming, even if a 5080 releases in six months and is ~35% faster for the same price or whatever.
Hopefully the AI powered FSR is actually decent, and RDNA 4 doesn't flop like RDNA 3, some competent competition like when RDNA 2 was around would be nice.
Raptor Lake and the 7800X3D can already sustain 240 FPS and you're GPU limited most of the time, so I doubt new CPUs will really bring much to the table besides efficiency improvements, some AI stuff, improved platform etc.
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
I mean, according to the latest Steam Hardware survey, 1% of Steam gamers have an RTX 4090. Small percentage I know, but that's still 1.32 million cards out there (132 million monthly active Steam users). 8/12 GB cards dominate, and 16/24 GB cards are less than 5% combined.Totally; I think the 4080 will be relevant for some time (until not only [RDNA5] next-gen consoles release, but they become the leading platforms). The problem has *always* been the price.
This is something nVIDIA has known since before it was released, and likely why it will continue to prop it up as long as they possibly can.
Eventually I'm sure we'll get a cheaper cut-down (16GB) GB203 (or next-gen) to compete...like the 4070 Ti Super but actually good-enough...but not until they've run their margins dry/AMD gains momentum.
I can't speak to how FSR will improve, although it surely will, but I *can* speak to how AMD *may* fix the RDNA3 arch with RDNA4.
You likely know. First, you likely have (4?/)8-bit precision units. Then it's bandwidth (likely greater cache if not memory speed), in which RDNA3 units can have up to a 20% performance improvement over RDNA2 using dual-issue when properly fed...and then fixing whatever the problem is with their pipeline (hotspots?) to sustain high-performance boost clocks (rather than 'efficient' clocks) on the process. It's completely achievable, but IMHO those cards are (likely) going to run hot and will probably use beefy coolers for a (relatively) small chip.
To me this makes sense, though. I've always thought they should create the smallest, most-efficient (spec-wise) chip that will cap out the max clock frequency of the high-performance libraries at 375w (2x8-pin).
Hopefully similar will be true with the half-N48 and ~200w (or whatever the threshold is for cheaper less-layer boards/components/coolers/lengths; it's somewhere around there) to compete with consoles.
Is this the most power-efficient when running at full load (which nobody actually does 24/7)? No. Does it make sense for most gamers (because cost/performance)? Yes.
As I've mentioned before, that is literally the lineage of ATi and why I loved them. Hopefully it shall return.
As for CPUs...yeah. I'm not particularly-enthused by Zen 5. The reason is, while there is an argument to be for a chip that is slightly faster than a 7800x3D, that's truly entering native 4k territory (for gaming)...
The rest of the ecosystem just ain't there yet (unless you're the guy buying a 5090, which ain't many). Hence I look forward to more-efficient chips that will fit that criteria when that time arrives...zen 6 or 7.
Hence why I said something like a 7700(x) being good-enough for most. If you want to spend more, or your particular niche situation requires more, I respect that...but that's not the general use-case.
Like-wise, I think we need at least 3nm for a *great* 1080p hand-held device. I also wouldn't be sad if AMD's memory controller were much better and we had faster memory (be it DDR6 or GDDR7).
While Zen 5 may be a great architecture, it might just be be "better" than what most people need now, but not reach the potential (and certainly not efficiency) of what can be done in the future.
Processor | i7 7700k |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI Z270 SLI Plus |
Cooling | CM Hyper 212 EVO |
Memory | 2 x 8 GB Corsair Vengeance |
Video Card(s) | Temporary MSI RTX 4070 Super |
Storage | Samsung 850 EVO 250 GB and WD Black 4TB |
Display(s) | Temporary Viewsonic 4K 60 Hz |
Case | Corsair Obsidian 750D Airflow Edition |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard |
Power Supply | EVGA SuperNova 850 W Gold |
Mouse | Logitech G502 |
Keyboard | Logitech G105 |
Software | Windows 10 |
You have to be careful how much info that you take from the Steam Survey. As a percentage of members it's alright to a degree but bear in mind that Steam doesn't survey everyone. It's a random sample and It's voluntary. If you are chosen then you will be asked when you logon if you would like to participate in the survey. Choose yes and Steam will search your PC automatically for hardware. Choose no and it won't. There is a way to force Steam to let you participate but hardly anyone knows about it or does that. So, a percentage doesn't equate to any actual amount of GPUs being used on Steam.I mean, according to the latest Steam Hardware survey, 1% of Steam gamers have an RTX 4090. Small percentage I know, but that's still 1.32 million cards out there (132 million monthly active Steam users). 8/12 GB cards dominate, and 16/24 GB cards are less than 5% combined.
The mid range xx60/xx70 class cards dominate, but are still significantly faster than console GPUs in terms of framerates/comparable quality settings. Optimum Tech did a video on this recently, an RTX 4060 PC, while in up front costs is slightly more expensive, is much, much faster than an Xbox Series X, which is arguably the console with the most GPU horsepower.
RTX cards are the vast majority within PC gaming it seems, so if AMD want to disrupt that they need to offer something appealing, with software that is competitive, not just "worse but 10% cheaper".
The first dedicated AMD card on the list, the RX 580, is about as popular as an RTX 4080, which is one of the least popular, and most expensive RTX Ada cards.
View attachment 348501
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
That's true. But sometimes you have to work with the data you have and I'm not aware of any other data that breaks down GPU market share as clearly or with Sean's scale. I don't consider mindfactory sales to be representative for example, but just about every pc gamer uses Steam.You have to be careful how much info that you take from the Steam Survey. As a percentage of members it's alright to a degree but bear in mind that Steam doesn't survey everyone. It's a random sample and It's voluntary. If you are chosen then you will be asked when you logon if you would like to participate in the survey. Choose yes and Steam will search your PC automatically for hardware. Choose no and it won't. There is a way to force Steam to let you participate but hardly anyone knows about it or does that. So, a percentage doesn't equate to any actual amount of GPUs being used on Steam.
In all the many, many years that I have had a Steam account I have only been asked 3 times to participate and only 1 time I let it and 1 time I forced it just to see if it would happen and it worked.
System Name | Best AMD Computer |
---|---|
Processor | AMD 7900X3D |
Motherboard | Asus X670E E Strix |
Cooling | In Win SR36 |
Memory | GSKILL DDR5 32GB 5200 30 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Pulse 7900XT (Watercooled) |
Storage | Corsair MP 700, Seagate 530 2Tb, Adata SX8200 2TBx2, Kingston 2 TBx2, Micron 8 TB, WD AN 1500 |
Display(s) | GIGABYTE FV43U |
Case | Corsair 7000D Airflow |
Audio Device(s) | Corsair Void Pro, Logitch Z523 5.1 |
Power Supply | Deepcool 1000M |
Mouse | Logitech g7 gaming mouse |
Keyboard | Logitech G510 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro 64 Steam. GOG, Uplay, Origin |
Benchmark Scores | Firestrike: 46183 Time Spy: 25121 |
That is funny considering that the only PC Steam registers for my hardware is my 3060 laptop. In what world have Steam charts become reliable? Maybe when you are trying to pigeon hole a point. I mean it includes Intel IGPUs in the middle of the chart you posted.That's true. But sometimes you have to work with the data you have and I'm not aware of any other data that breaks down GPU market share as clearly or with Sean's scale. I don't consider mindfactory sales to be representative for example, but just about every pc gamer uses Steam.
*Steam's scale, lol
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
Do you understand what a representative sample is?That is funny considering that the only PC Steam registers for my hardware is my 3060 laptop. In what world have Steam charts become reliable? Maybe when you are trying to pigeon hole a point. I mean it includes Intel IGPUs in the middle of the chart you posted.
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Apex Encore |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
Memory | 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA RTX A2000 |
Storage | 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD |
Display(s) | 55-inch LG G3 OLED |
Case | Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition |
Power Supply | EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Microsoft Classic IntelliMouse (2017) |
Keyboard | IBM Model M type 1391405 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 22H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
That is funny considering that the only PC Steam registers for my hardware is my 3060 laptop. In what world have Steam charts become reliable? Maybe when you are trying to pigeon hole a point. I mean it includes Intel IGPUs in the middle of the chart you posted.
System Name | Best AMD Computer |
---|---|
Processor | AMD 7900X3D |
Motherboard | Asus X670E E Strix |
Cooling | In Win SR36 |
Memory | GSKILL DDR5 32GB 5200 30 |
Video Card(s) | Sapphire Pulse 7900XT (Watercooled) |
Storage | Corsair MP 700, Seagate 530 2Tb, Adata SX8200 2TBx2, Kingston 2 TBx2, Micron 8 TB, WD AN 1500 |
Display(s) | GIGABYTE FV43U |
Case | Corsair 7000D Airflow |
Audio Device(s) | Corsair Void Pro, Logitch Z523 5.1 |
Power Supply | Deepcool 1000M |
Mouse | Logitech g7 gaming mouse |
Keyboard | Logitech G510 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro 64 Steam. GOG, Uplay, Origin |
Benchmark Scores | Firestrike: 46183 Time Spy: 25121 |
Thanks for your opinionProtip if you want to boost the AMD numbers on Steam a bit. Won't change the fact that the Radeon is effectively worthless, though... at least it serves the purpose of offloading general processing and saving precious video memory for my 4 GB 3050...
View attachment 348559
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Apex Encore |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15S upgraded with 2x NF-F12 iPPC-3000 fans and Honeywell PTM7950 TIM |
Memory | 32 GB G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB F5-6800J3445G16GX2-TZ5RK @ 7600 MT/s 36-44-44-52-96 1.4V |
Video Card(s) | NVIDIA RTX A2000 |
Storage | 500 GB WD Black SN750 SE NVMe SSD + 4 TB WD Red Plus WD40EFPX HDD |
Display(s) | 55-inch LG G3 OLED |
Case | Pichau Mancer CV500 White Edition |
Power Supply | EVGA 1300 G2 1.3kW 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Microsoft Classic IntelliMouse (2017) |
Keyboard | IBM Model M type 1391405 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro 22H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
Thanks for your opinion
System Name | Dark Palimpsest |
---|---|
Processor | Intel i9 13900k with Optimus Foundation Block |
Motherboard | EVGA z690 Classified |
Cooling | MO-RA3 420mm Custom Loop |
Memory | G.Skill 6000CL30, 64GB |
Video Card(s) | Nvidia 4090 FE with Heatkiller Block |
Storage | 3 NVMe SSDs, 2TB-each, plus a SATA SSD |
Display(s) | Gigabyte FO32U2P (32" QD-OLED) , Asus ProArt PA248QV (24") |
Case | Be quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 |
Audio Device(s) | Logitech G Pro X |
Power Supply | Be quiet! Straight Power 12 1200W |
Mouse | Logitech G502 X |
Keyboard | GMMK Pro + Numpad |
I have not read this entire thread, so please excuse my ignorance.
Now, truly, is a bad time to build a PC. Computex is literally in a couple weeks, in which the whole landscape/thought-process may change depending upon what happens there (and pricing of new/old parts).
...
System Name | Silent/X1 Yoga |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9800X3D @ 5.55ghz all core 1.2 V, Thermal Grizzly AM5 High Performance Heatspreader/1185 G7 |
Motherboard | ASUS ROG Strix X670E-I, chipset fans replaced with Noctua A14x25 G2 |
Cooling | Optimus Block, HWLabs Copper 240/40 + 240/30, D5/Res, 4x Noctua A12x25, 1x A14G2, Mayhems Ultra Pure |
Memory | 64 GB Dominator Titanium White 6000 MT, 150 ns tRFC, active cooled |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, Conductonaut Extreme, 18 W/mK MinusPad Extreme, Corsair XG7 Waterblock |
Storage | Intel Optane DC P1600X 118 GB, Samsung 990 Pro 2 TB |
Display(s) | 32" 240 Hz 1440p Samsung G7, 31.5" 165 Hz 1440p LG NanoIPS Ultragear, MX900 dual gas VESA mount |
Case | Sliger SM570 CNC Aluminium 13-Litre, 3D printed feet, custom front, LINKUP Ultra PCIe 4.0 x16 white |
Audio Device(s) | Audeze Maxwell Ultraviolet w/upgrade pads & LCD headband, Galaxy Buds 3 Pro, Razer Nommo Pro |
Power Supply | SF1000 Plat, full transparent custom cables, Sentinel Pro 1500 Online Double Conversion UPS w/Noctua |
Mouse | Razer Viper V3 Pro 8 KHz Mercury White & Pulsar Supergrip tape, Razer Atlas, Razer Strider Chroma |
Keyboard | Wooting 60HE+ module, TOFU-R CNC Alu/Brass, SS Prismcaps W+Jellykey, LekkerV2 mod, TLabs Leath/Suede |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | Legendary |
Agreed.The right time to build is when you want to use it. There will always be new skus "just around the corner"