• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

Intel to launch 6 core Coffee Lake-S CPUs & Z370 chipset 5 October 2017

Associate
Joined
7 Mar 2005
Posts
1,631
Whilst a tiny fraction of games are starting to benefit from more cores this doesn't mean it's worthwhile yet to change to the current crop of multiple core cpus which don't offer an advantage over quad core in current gaming scenarios and won't cut the mustard in a few years time when software starts to take advantage of multicores.

Whilst I am sure that's true for the games many people play, I've taken a look at the games I've played over the last 12 months, most are heavily multithreaded:
The Division
Deus Ex Mankind Divided
Watchdogs 2 - was actually CPU limited in built up areas
Ghost Recon Wildlands
Mass Effect Andromeda
Forza Horizon 3 (since the multi core optimisation option was added)

The only game I've played that used 1-2 threads over the last year was Prey. That's not to say that the games above didn't run well on my then 4790K - with the exception of Watchdogs 2 - but certainly the trend with the games I've experienced lately is strong multi-core support.
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Apr 2016
Posts
3,427
Whilst I am sure that's true for the games many people play, I've taken a look at the games I've played over the last 12 months, most are heavily multithreaded:
The Division
Deus Ex Mankind Divided
Watchdogs 2 - was actually CPU limited in built up areas
Ghost Recon Wildlands
Mass Effect Andromeda
Forza Horizon 3 (since the multi core optimisation option was added)

The only game I've played that used 1-2 threads over the last year was Prey. That's not to say that the games above didn't run well on my then 4790K - with the exception of Watchdogs 2 - but certainly the trend with the games I've experienced lately is strong multi-core support.
Absolutely and four cores is multi core.

@humbug posted up a video of the division with a four core i7 at 112 fps and an 8 core Ryzen at 116fps.

Those additional four cores must be sat there twiddling their thumbs?
 
Soldato
Joined
19 Feb 2011
Posts
5,849
Absolutely and four cores is multi core.

@humbug posted up a video of the division with a four core i7 at 112 fps and an 8 core Ryzen at 116fps.

Those additional four cores must be sat there twiddling their thumbs?

What resolution was that Division game running at? was it CPU bound? was it GPU bound? was there any evidence showing core usage etc? merely stating one cpu was matching another cpu via fps figures is not painting the whole picture now is it?
 
Associate
Joined
7 Mar 2005
Posts
1,631
Those additional four cores must be sat there twiddling their thumbs?

I've not retested all the games I listed since moving to Ryzen, but the general experience seems to be that the processes are split over move cores/threads whilst loading them more lightly. So as you say, not yet a requirement for current games but it at least bodes well for the future.

I should probably point out that I moved from the 4790k to Ryzen for non-gaming reasons, I am just happy that gaming performance did not degrade as a result.
 
Soldato
Joined
16 May 2007
Posts
3,220
What resolution was that Division game running at? was it CPU bound? was it GPU bound? was there any evidence showing core usage etc? merely stating one cpu was matching another cpu via fps figures is not painting the whole picture now is it?

That's the trick, you have to understand what us being tested and how. There are quite a few YouTube vids saying X cpu matches Y cpu in fps but it is simply in both cases the Gpu is at 100%.

Four core / 4 thread cpu's are starting to run into their limits on games like bf1.
 
Soldato
Joined
22 Apr 2016
Posts
3,427
What resolution was that Division game running at? was it CPU bound? was it GPU bound? was there any evidence showing core usage etc? merely stating one cpu was matching another cpu via fps figures is not painting the whole picture now is it?
I think you'll have to ask the original poster why he posted it up. I think I know why and that was to show the superiority of an 8 core cpu. Unfortunately in this case it didn't show that. Maybe if gpu was the limiting factor it could be higher but maybe not. Both cpus were within less than 1% of each other.

Fact is it's irrelevant if it could potentially go faster with a faster gpu when there isn't a faster gpu.
 
Soldato
Joined
9 Jul 2004
Posts
4,522
Location
Nottingham
Need a little bit of advice please chaps.

I'm supposed to be building my cousin a new desktop PC soon. He has given me the money for the system already, and has already ordered a 1080ti and PG279Q monitor, as well as logitech keyboard and gaming mouse.

I was just about to spec him a system with an i7 7700k, when i stumbled upon this thread. Is this new platform worth waiting for, considering he doesn't want to have to upgrade his computer for a number of years. He has never spent this much on a system before, and i would rather him wait a few weeks if it's going to be a major overhaul to the intel range.

Sorry if ive missed the information mentioned, but how much difference is the cost expected to be? (with intel processors and motherboards alike...)

Cheers.
Nathan.
 
Soldato
Joined
29 Jan 2015
Posts
4,904
Location
West Midlands
Need a little bit of advice please chaps.

I'm supposed to be building my cousin a new desktop PC soon. He has given me the money for the system already, and has already ordered a 1080ti and PG279Q monitor, as well as logitech keyboard and gaming mouse.

I was just about to spec him a system with an i7 7700k, when i stumbled upon this thread. Is this new platform worth waiting for, considering he doesn't want to have to upgrade his computer for a number of years. He has never spent this much on a system before, and i would rather him wait a few weeks if it's going to be a major overhaul to the intel range.

Sorry if ive missed the information mentioned, but how much difference is the cost expected to be? (with intel processors and motherboards alike...)

Cheers.
Nathan.

Yes it's absolutely worth waiting for.
I fully expect this to last as long as the 2500k did. You can be sure the 8700k will be enough for a good few years.
 
Soldato
Joined
28 May 2007
Posts
18,243
Why would this last as long as the 2500K. I was waiting for years to upgrade Intel quad core systems. The only reason the 2500k "lasted" so long was becuase Intel milked the hell out of the quad core design not because it was an awesome performer.

I really hope we don't get stuck with hex cores for the same amount of time.
 
Permabanned
Joined
23 Apr 2014
Posts
23,553
Location
Hertfordshire
Why would this last as long as the 2500K. I was waiting for years to upgrade Intel quad core systems. The only reason the 2500k "lasted" so long was becuase Intel milked the hell out of the quad core design not because it was an awesome performer.

I really hope we don't get stuck with hex cores for the same amount of time.

Already got relatively inexpensive 16 cores with Threadripper.
 
Permabanned
Joined
23 Apr 2014
Posts
23,553
Location
Hertfordshire
Yet they get beat in games by a 4 core. More cores can hinder performance as in the case of thread ripper and why game mode is faster.
There needs to be a happy medium. At the moment it seems the 8700k is it.

Continued development and refinement of the cpu platforms will give gainz but that wasnt the point, just that more cores are becoming more and more affordable. :)

Also not really worried about 80 fps vs 90 fps, so long as they keep evolving.
 
Permabanned
Joined
23 Apr 2014
Posts
23,553
Location
Hertfordshire
When you look at surveys for gaming PCs very few people spend the £1K that Threadripper costs alone on the combined cost of a CPU + GPU + Mobo.
Games developers aren't concerned about the small high end crowd but the mainstream.

That's not the point either though. Point is higher multi core is becoming more and more affordable.

Besides, going by surveys an 8700K wont be mainstream either.
 
Caporegime
Joined
17 Mar 2012
Posts
47,568
Location
ARC-L1, Stanton System
24 or 32 threads (Threadripper) will not be utilised let alone needed by any game engine for the next decade, i think we can be sure of that. thats not the point of those CPU's or anyother CPU with that many compute threads.

But more than 8? oh yes, we are already there, people just don't see it yet because we don't yet have the GPU power to make it obvious, soon tho and both Intel and AMD know it.
 
Back
Top Bottom