By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
fatslob-:O said:

Not surprised ...

I keep hearing reviews mentioning the rapid packed math feature but no games are using it accept for two upcoming titles so far ... (No reviewers are ever going to give the benefit of doubt for unreleased games.)

Even Anandtech's statement mirrored my own sentiment.
That rapid packed math will not be a *thing* for a very long time as there isn't enough industry support for it.

It will be interesting to see how Vega ages though, especially when Rapid Packed Math gains more industry support.

Captain_Yuri said:



Granted it's only one game and does redeem itself with higher resolutions but... Wtf

1080P isn't going to be shining Vega in the brightest of lights anyway.


Teeqoz said:
Guys I think I got cancer at work today.

A co-worker of mine started saying that AMD CPUs had always been better for gaming than intel CPUs. I told him that you might be able to make that claim for Ryzen (possibly), but that there's no way in hell you could claim that AMD's CPUs beat Intel in gaming before that, unless you go over a decade back. And he just denied it. So I asked him why Intel CPUs always beat AMD CPUs in benchmarks and he told me it didn't matter because the human eye can't see over 30 fps anyway. And this was coming from a PC gamer.

o_o

Since the Core 2 Duo burst onto the scene, Intel has held the edge. That cannot be disputed.
For gaming Intel still has the edge with the 7700K.

However, AMD did bring us the first $100 quad-core CPU with the Athlon 2 x4.
And have consistently provided some amazing price/performance gaming CPU's like the Athlon X2 7750, Phenom 2 x4, Phenom 2 x6, AMD FX 6300 and so on. (Ironically I owned most of those chips at some point. Haha.)

And the human eye does not see in framerates... And it can and will discern more than 30fps.



--::{PC Gaming Master Race}::--