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It depends. Some games demand more CPU usage, while others might require more GPU usage. You can monitor performance with a few different applications to see how different games utilize your CPU and GPU to get an idea. Also, check out comparisons on YouTube.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.No. It will be almost the same. If you want the Best FPS in games, go with 12900k. But 5600x is good enough for 3070
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Going from a Ryzen 5 5600x to a 5800x will provide very little benefit in a gaming use case 99% of the time. The additional cores and threads aren't being taken advantage of by modern games as of now.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The short, quick, and dirty answer is maybe, yet most likely no. The more detailed answer is it depends - see below. If you are streaming, recording the session, have a guide open, or something else while you are gaming, it very well might, as it now has 33% more processors to unload the other things onto. Most current games, and these from the last 10+ years, rely on DirectX version 9, 11, or 12, and so they don't take full advantage of multi-core CPUs. Also, at 1080p and below the FPSs are more CPU bound while at 1440p it is a mix of CPU and GPU, yet anything higher and the task falls more on the GPU. Finally, we are talking about CPUs in the same Zen family - Zen 3, equivalent to Intel's 10th and 11th gen CPUs (107xx and 117xx for example). So while you will most likely see a 15 to 20% improvement over the Zen 2 family (think Ryzen 5 3600 and Ryzen 7 3700), you will not see that same 33% improvement by adding two more cores/four more threads.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes I have this cpu paired with EVGA 3070ti and I get 240-300+fps on Cold War and many other games, but you need to make sure you have a 240-300+hz monitor to go with it as well to see and feel the most differences.
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