- Joined
- May 1, 2012
- Messages
- 1,027 (0.22/day)
- Location
- New Jersey, USA
System Name | Current Rig |
---|---|
Processor | AMD 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSI x670e Tomahawk wifi |
Cooling | Artic Freezer II 360 |
Memory | G.Skill 32gb ddr5 6000mhz |
Video Card(s) | AMD 7900XTX 24 GB |
Storage | Samsung SSD 980 PRO 2TB |
Display(s) | Alienware 3420DW 120 Freesync |
Case | LianLi Lancool III white non-rgb |
Audio Device(s) | Onboard ALC |
Power Supply | Corsair Shift 1000W |
Mouse | G502 Hero |
Keyboard | Ducky Shine 5 |
Software | Win 11 64bit |
Benchmark Scores | The second best! |
Your logic is flawed. The 3820 came out before the 3770k and was a sandy chip. The 4820k is more analogous to the 3770k where the 3820 is better compared against the 2600k or 2700k. Generally speaking the 3820 performed as good or better than it's Sandy equivalent. The only real difference is that it didn't clock as high.
Either way, I still think I would have preferred a quad-core with it's PCI-E root complex intact. Most of the advantage skt2011 has over its mainstream counterparts is it's PCI-E lanes. 6 cores really isn't going to change your gaming experience, even more so when it's shown that as resolutions increase, the amount of CPU power to maintain the same frame rate is less because the GPUs are doing more. So if you're driving 4K displays or surround/eyefinity, I really would imagine that you want those PCI-E lanes. That's me though. I don't plan on divorcing skt2011 any time soon. I really don't think that (other than more cores,) upgrading would get me anything more than just getting a 4930k on the cheap from someone who is upgrading.
I agree that hedt's advantage over the mainstream has always been extra pci-e lanes, but Intel creating a niche within the platform is baffling.
Strictly for gaming and overclocking, the 5820k seems like it will be a dud. I'd like to be pleasantly surprised but I see Intel shafting the hedt adopters.