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- Aug 21, 2013
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System Name | DarkStar |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D |
Motherboard | Gigabyte X570 Aorus Master 1.0 (BIOS F39g) |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer II 420mm AIO (rev4) |
Memory | 4x8GB Patriot Viper DDR4 4400C19 @ 3733Mhz 14-14-13-27 1T |
Video Card(s) | GAINWARD GeForce RTX 2080Ti Phoenix GS 11GB GDDR6 @ 2100Mhz Core/16Gbps Mem |
Storage | 1TB Samsung 990 Pro (OS);2TB Samsung PM9A1;4TB XPG S70 Blade (Games);14TB WD UltraStar HC530 (Video) |
Display(s) | 27" ASUS ROG Swift PG279Q @ 2560x1440 @ 165Hz IPS G-Sync |
Case | be quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 Rev.2 |
Audio Device(s) | SteelSeries Arctis Nova Pro Wireless |
Power Supply | 1000W Seasonic PRIME Ultra Titanium;600W APC SMT750i UPS |
Mouse | Logitech G604 |
Keyboard | Logitech G910 Orion Spark |
Software | Windows 11 Pro x64 24H2 (Build 26100.3775) |
Does this mean they will become better in gaming?
I'm no expert, this is a serious question. I wanna know.
It will not improve gaming.@Beginner Macro Device
Theoretically. Latency matters a lot for gaming workloads. How much this will pan out in practice in terms of actual frametimes is up in the air.
It does not. As you can see from the images inter-core latencies are the same and besides it's hard to improve below 20ns anyway.Not necessarily, it says inter-core, not solely cross-CCD. So it should help single CCD chips too, albeit to a lesser extent, theoretically.
Great news!
Do we have a similar "map" for Threadrippers?