- Joined
- Dec 25, 2020
- Messages
- 6,785 (4.73/day)
- Location
- São Paulo, Brazil
System Name | "Icy Resurrection" |
---|---|
Processor | 13th Gen Intel Core i9-13900KS Special Edition |
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) | ASUS ROG Strix GeForce RTX™ 4080 16GB GDDR6X White OC Edition |
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 |
Keyboard | Generic PS/2 |
Software | Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC 24H2 |
Benchmark Scores | I pulled a Qiqi~ |
All down to the game how it managed with the cores and threads of the cpu some time it isn't optimised correctly therefore having low performance and unplayable. What cpu do you have
It's the one a few posts above, E5-4669 v3. It's the same as the 2699 v3, with two differences: 700 MHz lower turbo, and it can do quad-socket (whereas the 2699 v3 only supports being run in pairs). Useless when used on a single socket board.
I don't think it's a matter of optimization really, just this CPU being really slow and not at all meant for gaming. It used to work back in the day since games mostly targeted being run on a i7-2600, and stock performance is pretty similar between them, difference that the Xeon had a massive cache so some games ran really well on it. But it aged very poorly since software now makes use of Ryzen and modern Core i9's strong single threaded performance.