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Forums - PC Discussion - Core i5 2500K is a gaming beast

FunFan said:
Locknuts said:

Well that sucks....

But. But. Now you can rock your Sandy forever...

I.....guess......



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Exact cpu I have. I really should overclock it though. Been running stock for almost 5 years. Been tempted to upgrade ram and gpu and maybe adding an ssd but never thought of replacing the 2500k.



Xeon said:
Exact cpu I have. I really should overclock it though. Been running stock for almost 5 years. Been tempted to upgrade ram and gpu and maybe adding an ssd but never thought of replacing the 2500k.

They are seriously easy to overclock. I got mine to 4.5Ghz stable with no voltage adjustment.



One thing to consider too is that software development has been lagging behind the hardware advancements. Most software still doesn't innately take advantage of multi-threading as much as it could. However, since the smartphone boom, new programming techniques have been applied to asymmetric multi-core CPU's (which are more complex than symmetric ones), and a lot of these techniques are moving their way into other applications. More and more programmers are also becoming better equipped with concurrency skills than in the past, which makes the costs of employing said programmers less as the skill becomes more common. Game AI, game physics, and complicated rule-based algorithms will probably benefit much more than graphics from these advancements though.



Locknuts said:
Ganoncrotch said:

Heh, Intel do certainly know how to make a good chip, I'm still a generation behind you again with a 9 year old Core2Quad (2 years of it's life have been spent running WoW for me, sad times) which has never had too much issues handling the majority of games, Considering its age (it was costly before) but it definitely shoots holes through every "you gotta upgrade a gaming PC every 15 minutes" argument that I read.

There are always those who will want the newest tech just because every PC gamecase seems to put the i7 on there as recommended now just because well, I guess and it frees them of someone having a PC setup poorly and not getting the most out of their older chipset. Still tho, gives the mistaken illusion that you can't have a great time with semi older pieces inside your beast.

One tech from the last couple of years (or moreso popular and cheaper in the last few years) is a good SSD, just from a quality of life, PC starting up in single digit figures of seconds, applications jumping at you before you click on them, if you spend a lot of time on a PC (even if it isn't gaming) you are literally wasting time out of your short life if you have your OS and programs on an old magnetic HDD imo, SSD will literally save you hours of waiting from your lifetime! And yeah... they're getting so cheap now that everyone should consider getting at least an OS sized one, at the very least. 240gb ones do not break into triple figures anymore.

Yep, they're seriously affordable now and the boost in overall performance you get for general tasks is ridiculous.

I was running a 60GB SSD in RST with a mechanical drive until last year, but nothing compares with a nice big SSD.

I think there is this illusion as well still that SSD's are things which cost a lot for small amounts of space, here in Ireland at least can get

http://www.komplett.ie/kingston-ssdnow-v300-240gb/80009970/details.aspx

or

http://www.komplett.ie/kingston-ssdnow-v300-480gb/20220206/details.aspx

So yeah, 90/160euro for 240/480gb of SSD goodness. It was the 240gb version of that I bought myself a year ago, Don't think I could ever go back to a magnetic disk drive for my OS.



Why not check me out on youtube and help me on the way to 2k subs over at www.youtube.com/stormcloudlive

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Locknuts said:
Xeon said:
Exact cpu I have. I really should overclock it though. Been running stock for almost 5 years. Been tempted to upgrade ram and gpu and maybe adding an ssd but never thought of replacing the 2500k.

They are seriously easy to overclock. I got mine to 4.5Ghz stable with no voltage adjustment.

Good to know! Thanks!



Kinda depressing PC tech has stagnated so much. This whole multi core stuff still doesn't seem to pay off, or maybe it's Windows that sucks. Why does my laptop struggle so much while multi tasking if the i7 quad core cpu is always below 20% utilized.
I remembered being amazed by how fast everything was when buying a new pc or laptop. That hasn't been the case in the last 5 years. Still same slow. Especially when trying to browse vgchartz with a game running in another window.
At least GPUs are still getting better.



The Sandy Bridge chips were, and still are great for gaming.I had a 2600k for my first build ever and managed to get it to 5.0Ghz for daily use, it was great for emulation, maybe even better than my 5960X running at 4.5Ghz.It is really sad that a lot of software doesn't take advantage of newer chips, I've never seen my CPU go above 55% while gaming at 4K and multitasking at the same time, just imagine the possibilities if all 16 threads were used effectively or even 32 threads in a not so distant future.



SvennoJ said:
Kinda depressing PC tech has stagnated so much. This whole multi core stuff still doesn't seem to pay off, or maybe it's Windows that sucks. Why does my laptop struggle so much while multi tasking if the i7 quad core cpu is always below 20% utilized.
I remembered being amazed by how fast everything was when buying a new pc or laptop. That hasn't been the case in the last 5 years. Still same slow. Especially when trying to browse vgchartz with a game running in another window.
At least GPUs are still getting better.

I think a lot of it has to do with developers not utilizing features and multi-threading the way they could. The hardware performs a lot better than most are willing to exploit for the added cost and time But, yeah, I agree with you.

That and the console friendly industry turn we''ve seen in the past decade, along with technical aspects, there are also a lot of atrocious interfaces and menu systems in modern games and many ports are very cheap and poorly made.



Nettles said:
Good stuff man.Yeah i remember back in the mid 90s a PC was obsolete for new games 2 years after release.
Buy a P90 in 1995 for what, $2000 in 1995 dollars, by 1997 you couldn't run big games of that year like Myth or Quake 2 without serious framerate issues.Plus you could notice a huge difference when you upgraded for things like web browsing or even using an mp3 player.Not anymore.

My machine is almost 6 years old now,Cant play new AAAs like witcher 3 but still good for everything else.I am waiting for the new graphene technology chips before upgrading again.That is the next huge leap and it's not far off.

Nowadays we aren't advancing that much. besides shading, resolution, and so on, a PC can now last longer.



 

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12/22/2016- Made a bet with Ganoncrotch that the first 6 months of 2017 will be worse than 2016. A poll will be made to determine the winner. Loser has to take a picture of them imitating their profile picture.