RTX 4090 & 53 Games: Ryzen 7 5800X vs Core i9-12900K Review 166

RTX 4090 & 53 Games: Ryzen 7 5800X vs Core i9-12900K Review

Benchmark Results »

Introduction

NVIDIA Logo

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 "Ada" was released last week, and put simply, it's the fastest graphics card you can buy right now—by a huge margin. Our continuing coverage of "Ada" spans nine graphics card reviews and a couple of feature articles. The RTX 4090 is a beast of a graphics card for 4K Ultra HD gaming—and 4K only. It's really hard to recommend this card to the 1440p crowd, even to those with higher refresh-rate monitors; and impossible to do so to those with 1080p. This is because the RTX 4090 is simply too fast a graphics card for modern processors to handle at lower resolutions, and we encounter CPU-bottlenecks in resolutions as high as 1440p, where the performance gap between the RTX 4090 and RTX 3090 narrows from 39% to 26%. As you lower the resolution your framerate increases. The RTX 4090 is able to sustain a very high frame-rate that is bottlenecked at the CPU, as the CPU isn't able to process frames fast enough. At higher resolutions, the bottleneck shifts to the GPU.



Last week we started doing mega benchmark articles, which we'd like to call "TPU-50," for the roughly fifty games we test the new graphics cards across. This is double the number of games from our main graphics card reviews, which have 25. In this particular article, we are putting the GeForce RTX 4090 "Ada" through a massive 53 game tests, listed below. In the course of our testing, we considered requests by many people in the comments section of the RTX 4090 to test the card with a Core i9-12900K "Alder Lake" processor, and so we're presenting you performance numbers for these 53 tests, but as a CPU performance comparison between the Ryzen 7 5800X from our graphics card reviews, and a machine powered by a Core i9-12900K.

Our graphics card test system is powered by an AMD Ryzen 7 5800X 8-core/16-thread "Zen 3" processor, a machine we've been using since last year, which replaced our older test-bench that was powered by a Intel Core i9-9900K. Changing our VGA test bench is a complex process for us, which involves re-testing 33 graphics cards in three resolutions, across a selection of 25 games (that's 2,475 tests not counting corrections). Our most recent rebench was toward the end of Summer 2022, with the 5800X. Although we had the opportunity to switch to the Core i9-12900K "Alder Lake," we decided against doing so, because we wanted to see what Zen 4 can bring to the table. Buying components for a 12900K test system, only to scrap it a few weeks later in favor of Zen 4 makes no sense. Another option could have been the Ryzen 5800X3D, but here too, we opted for a wait-and-see strategy because early Zen 4 leaks suggested spectacular gains. Since then there have been launches back-to-back: Zen 4, Intel Arc, GeForce RTX 4090, and Intel 13th Gen this week. There was simply no way we could fit in a two-week non-stop benching process in this time. We definitely have plans to upgrade our GPU test system this year, but we haven't finalized the hardware list since the Core i9-13900K isn't available on the market yet.

Our selection of games spans the past six years of game releases, across a plethora of game genres, game engines, and graphics APIs (DirectX 12, DirectX 11, Vulkan). The article should highlight just how the i9-12900K fares against the 5800X. Our testing data depicts performance gains, as well as losses for either side.

Benchmarks

Among our games, you'll find titles that have been included in TechPowerUp graphics card reviews over the past years, as well as some of the newer ones joining our bench soon. Going forward, we will of course make changes to the game selection for TPU50. Our goal is to have a rich diversity of game genres, engines, and 3D graphics APIs. Equal settings were used for both platforms, and proprietary features disabled.

All games are tested in custom bench scenes as the integrated benchmarks often paint a completely inaccurate picture compared to actual gameplay. Also, the GPU vendors actively optimize their drivers to achieve good results in integrated benchmarks.

TitleReleasedAPIEngine
Ace Combat 72019DX11UE4
Age of Empires IV2021DX12Essence 5.0
Anno 18002019DX12Anno
Assassin's Creed Valhalla2020DX12Anvil Next 2.0
Battlefield V2018DX11Frostbite
Borderlands 32019DX11UE4
Civilization VI2016DX12Civilization
Control2019DX12Northlight
Crysis Remastered2020DX11CryEngine 5.6
Cyberpunk 20772020DX12RED Engine
Darksiders 32018DX11UE4
Days Gone2021DX11UE4
Death Stranding2020DX12Decima
Deathloop2021DX12Void
Detroit: Become Human2019VulkanQuantic Dream
Devil May Cry 52019DX11RE
Divinity Original Sin 22017DX11Divinity
DOOM Eternal2020Vulkanid Tech 7
Dota 22016DX11Source 2
Dying Light 22022DX12C-Engine
Elden Ring2022DX12Souls
F1 222022DX12EGO 4.0
Far Cry 52018DX11Dunia
Far Cry 62021DX12Dunia
Forza Horizon 52021DX12ForzaTech
Ghost Recon Wildlands2017DX11Anvil Next 2.0
God of War2022DX11Jetpack in-house
Grand Theft Auto V2013DX11RAGE
GreedFall2019DX11Silk
Guardians of the Galaxy2021DX12Dawn
Halo Infinite2021DX12Slipspace
Hitman 32021DX12Glacier
Just Cause 42018DX11Apex
Metro Exodus2019DX124A
Monster Hunter World2018DX11MT Framework
Prey2017DX11CryEngine
Project Cars 32020DX11Madness
Rage 22019VulkanAvalanche
Red Dead Redemption 22019VulkanRAGE
Resident Evil 32020DX12RE
Resident Evil Village2021DX12RE
Sekiro2019DX11Souls
Shadow of War2017DX11LithTech
Shadow of the Tomb Raider2018DX12Foundation
Sniper Ghost Warrior Contracts 22021DX11CryEngine3
Spider-Man Remastered2022DX12Insomniac
Star Wars Squadrons2020DX11Frostbite
Strange Brigade2018DX12Asura
Total War: Warhammer III2022DX11Warscape
Watch Dogs: Legion2020DX12Disrupt
Witcher 32015DX11RED Engine
Wolcen2020DX11CryEngine3
Wolfenstein 22017Vulkanid Tech 6

Test System

The goal of this review is NOT to test "AMD vs Intel at similar config", but "The current GPU Test System that I have right now, a decent but slightly aged config, vs 12900K" to find out how much of a difference an upgrade can bring.

Test System "5800X"
Processor:AMD Ryzen 7 5800X, PBO Max Enabled
(Zen 3, 32 MB Cache)
Motherboard:EVGA X570 Dark
BIOS 1.08
Resizable BAR:Enabled
Memory:Thermaltake TOUGHRAM, 16 GB DDR4
@ 4000 MHz 20-23-23-42 1T
Infinity Fabric @ 2000 MHz (1:1)
Cooling:Arctic Liquid Freezer II
280 mm AIO
Thermal Paste:Arctic MX-5
Storage:2x Neo Forza NFP455 2 TB M.2 NVMe SSD
Power Supply:Seasonic Prime Ultra Titanium 850 W
Case:darkFlash DLZ31 Mesh
Operating System:Windows 10 Professional 64-bit
Version 21H2 (Nov 2021 Update)
Drivers: NVIDIA GeForce 522.25 WHQL

Test System "12900K"
Processor:Intel Core i9-12900K
(Alder Lake, 30 MB Cache)
Motherboard:ASUS Z690 Maximus Hero
BIOS 2004
Memory:2x 16 GB DDR5-6000
36-36-36-76 2T / Gear 2
All other specifications same as above
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