I downloaded it in anticipation of my new pc, and thought I'd try it on my old 1gb card just for a laugh. At the intro scene in the chopper, the guy would speak the line, then it would take another minute for his mouth to complete all the movements lolJust Cause 3 is raping my PC, I had to put stuff to medium (1920x1080) 😧
What's the AMD equivalent? 390? 390X?NVidia gtx970 are pretty good for the price compared to 980ti and so on. However the AMD R9 range offer very good value for money.
That's why I went for it, overclockers.co.uk have it for £330, I just paid £350 for it 5 days ago fml lmao. For gaming single core performance is quiet important as not all cores can be utilised in various scenarios, Intels single core performance beats AMD hands down, and Intels architecture is far ahead of AMDI'm doing the same @Snake182, going from AMD to Intel and will be looking to put my order in next week. I was looking at getting the 5820k, but the 6700k isn't much more expensive. It seems to save a LOT of power! The 5820 has the extra cores though
I'm not sure what is better for gaming, more cores or higher clock speed
The AMD equivalent to GTX 980/980ti would be the cards you have mentioned yes. AMD's GPU's seem to have more GDDR5 memory than equivalent NVidia cards which is annoying as I prefer NVidia lolWhat's the AMD equivalent? 390? 390X?
That's where it started getting expensive for me, most of the decent Intel gaming oriented boards are £150+, the one I just purchased has a dial on the mobo just for overclocking which is handy.For the sake of £30 I might go for it then, it means finding a new MB though
Looking at the specs its a very good board, x99 chipset processors can get very costly indeed lol, that's why I went with 1151 chipset on the new skylake range in the endlol the one I was looking at is £260 https://www.overclockers.co.uk/asus...cket-2011-ddr4-atx-motherboard-mb-632-as.html
It was the MB that throttled my upgrading options with AMD, so I don't want to make the same mistake
Spent weeks f**king about trying to get hold of a MoBo to run SLi on 1155.
Had 3 off eBay with issues so returned them. Finally got it all working.
Comparison of OC'd i5 3570K and OC'd 970 FTW vs stock 3570K and stock SLi'd 970's.
Decent jump
View attachment 142598
Nothing beats new computer bits, feels great unpacking and spending ages looking at the bits before putting them together.
I've got a red and black themed motherboard myself.
My build is post 1932.
You do have hyperthreading though whereas the i5 doesn't. My primary card isn't boosting much higher than the base clock due to temps either. I need a new case really as airflow in mine isn't great at allQuite surprised at those results - I would have thought they would be a fair bit higher? Especially when you consider my CPU is 2008 vintage...
That said, I tend not to take much to heart with these benchmarking tools. There are so many tiny variations that create (or alter) a score - I just take it with a pinch of salt!
I gonna go for the Asus Z170-A. I was looking at the deluxe version but I don't think I really need it. So that has worked out as a nice little saving actuallyLooking at the specs its a very good board, x99 chipset processors can get very costly indeed lol, that's why I went with 1151 chipset on the new skylake range in the end
I've got my 780ti running something like 1215mhz IIRC, but I'm contemplating swaping to a z97m and SLI'ing with my 780.
Worth it?
Got to consider vram too, 2GB a card does not equate to 4gb total (As each card is often working from the same texture sets, it's almost mirrored on both sets of RAM) Same with tri and quad configurations. DX12 should remove this, but unsure if it's just going to be exclusive to DX12 pure breeds. Some people also suffer from microstutter.
After having experience with a single, trifire and SLI/quad SLI setups, a single fast card would be my way forward.
I'd probably be looking at the nVidia 970. Relatively good pricing, decent performance and plenty of variations / manufacturers to choose from.What's best bang for buck card of the moment?
Given the level of CPU you are considering, the CPU clock speed won't be an issue as you will have plenty of headroom modern games. A high-end / enthusiast level 4-6 core CPU will see you good for gaming for many years to come in my opinion. I would only go for more cores than that if you are a serious power user that needs it; i.e. you are performing computationally intensive processes such as rendering 3D graphics, big data analysis, complex simulations, etc.I'm not sure what is better for gaming, more cores or higher clock speed
Single core performance is important, but the move to parallelism and distributed processing over multiple cores is slowly gaining momentum. I'm disappointed that the move isn't happening quicker but robust programming across multiple threads and cores is not a trivial thing. It's easy to do it badly with catastrophic results! Thankfully the new iteration and evolution of API's and engines are better written with fundamental support for threading and working across multiple processing units (rather than half-assed attempts to shoe-horn in such functionality in legacy systems).For gaming single core performance is quiet important as not all cores can be utilised in various scenarios...
Thanks for the tag, D. I've never been a fan of multiple GPU's despite having worked on such systems from day one. I've always preferred to go with the most expensive single card solution I could afford at the time. From a development point-of-view the sheer awkwardness and hoops you have to jump through to get your system rendering nicely in SLI / Crossfire (in the past at least) has been nothing but a ballache. On top of trying to deal with the issues from there simply being so many different cards out in the market to support, the inevitable driver issues, and everything else, I am not surprised that many games don't have SLI support (or they are often very bugged). Sure, I appreciate there are a few games out there that work well in SLI / Crossfire but they are the exception rather than the rule in my opinion!Coming from someone who previously had SLi'd GTX460s and now SLi'd GTX690s - I'd personally say its not worth it......... currently. The main issue is with the previous versions of DirectX - up to and including DX11. They aren't really written with true parallel graphics tasking in mind. They attempt it - and depending upon the gfx engine in question - sometimes make an admirable attempt to get a performance increase. But all things being equal - I could have bought a single 980Ti card (with the all important 6GB onboard) for the combined price that I paid for the two 690s. And sat here today, I know which one I'd rather have.
I'd wait rather than rip your whole system apart mate. I love the 780 Ti and it's still an incredibly capable card. I only truly sold it so that I could work on some DX12 and development code that needed features on the newer cards. I found the 780 Ti more than capable of running my games at 1080p and 1200p as near as dammit on maxed settings The arrival of Pascal should see some nice reductions in prices on the 980 Ti's but it might be a while yet.Ta folks. I already have the 780, but if it's not worth it then I won't go ripping it all apart! Looking back it'd need to go watercooled as well because my air cooler wouldn't fit with an extra card.
Wait a while for 980tis to go down then :smile:
I'd wait rather than rip your whole system apart mate. I love the 780 Ti and it's still an incredibly capable card. I only truly sold it so that I could work on some DX12 and development code that needed features on the newer cards. I found the 780 Ti more than capable of running my games at 1080p and 1200p as near as dammit on maxed settings :smile: The arrival of Pascal should see some nice reductions in prices on the 980 Ti's but it might be a while yet.
:tonguewink: I don't think 4K is truly 'there' yet. Personally, until I can get a solid 4K experience from a single card (i.e. max settings with consistent 60fps+) then I'll only use 4K for non-gaming applications. I love my new 980Ti but it's certainly not capable of 4K on its own. I think it will be a generation or two yet until we see single card solutions capable of delivering at the levels of fidelity we have become accustomed to. In the meantime 4K remains the domain of the ballers and multi-gpu setups (with all the headaches that can come with such setups) :tonguewink:Yeah, 1080p performance is great. Problem is I've developed a taste for 4k now!
Geekiest thread on CS, bar none.
The AMD equivalent to GTX 980/980ti would be the cards you have mentioned yes. AMD's GPU's seem to have more GDDR5 memory than equivalent NVidia cards which is annoying as I prefer NVidia lol
I've got my 780ti running something like 1215mhz IIRC, but I'm contemplating swaping to a z97m and SLI'ing with my 780.
Worth it?
What case is that? Look lovely!nom :grin:
I'm gonna wait till tomorrow for the boot up, bit tired now. I cloned the SSD from my old rig on to a HDD so that I can still use it while I set up the new rig. And WOW it is so slow now! I forgot what a massive difference SSD's make. Takes so long to boot up and do anything
Does anyone know what the deal is with the reset switches on these MB's? Instead of just ground and reset switch, I've got ground, rstcon# and +3v. The pins from the case switch don't split, and some googling tells me that putting it on ground and rstcon# doesn't work. I'm not too fussed because I never use the reset button, but it would be nice if it was right.
Let us know how you find it. My G19s is on deaths door and will soon need replacing.Just treat myself to a Logitech G910 mechanical keyboard and the G700S mouse.
What was wrong with it?Got a new ROG swift from Scan so they are both perfect now thankfully.
Decent! Was that the 3.5GB memory issue or just running out of puff do you know?I'm getting a solid 60fps at near max settings on GTA5 :smiley:
At first I maxed out everything, then started panicking when I got the stuttering frames at high speed. After a bit of googling I realised I was upscaling to 4K lol