![]() So I found this little one which in fact is not a power supply but a Module to use an external PSU: I looked at power supplies and they are quite big. ok yes that's the 2400G, but the 2200G isn't really all that much slower considering that overclocking the iGPU of the 2200G results in performance comparable to a stock 2400G, and Rogue Leader is notoriously difficult to run anyway (and looking as the OSD, it looked more like a CPU bottleneck than a GPU one for that specific game). (05-15-2018, 03:18 AM)TKSilver Wrote: The Ryzen is going to be around the 550Ti with most games fine at 720p a few at native and some you can push to 1080p.You underestimate the power of Ryzen behold - 3x IR with asynchronous ubershaders: And yes, the integrated graphics on the Ryzen 2200G would be considerably better as well. Nevertheless, the G5500 would be a wiser choice than the G4600 as it costs a similar price yet is 200MHz faster and also uses 300-series LGA1151 motherboards (which provides a better upgrade path due to compatibility with Coffee Lake).īut if we're talking upgrade paths, then the Ryzen 2200G and its AM4 socket would definitely be the king of that with support until year 2020. However, I would not be surprised at all if the UHD 630 is only capable of 2x IR and therefore wouldn't really be an ideal solution. I personally can also attest that the iGPU on the Pentium G3258 is only really usable at 1x IR, and even then it isn't always depending on the game (only hits ~40fps in Metroid Prime 3 on OpenGL in Lubuntu 18.04). With that out of the way, if you really want to use the Intel integrated graphics included in the CPU, then make sure that it uses at least UHD 630 which can be found on the Pentium G4600 as well as the Pentium G5500 and G5600. ![]() Keep in mind that, for any sort of integrated graphics (Intel or AMD Ryzen), you will want to use dual-channel RAM (such as 2x4GB rather than 1x8GB) as this can substantially boost the performance of your integrated graphics. Will the in-built graphics be enough if I buy a pentium G3258, a G4560, a G5600 or an i5 2500k and want to game at full speed 60 fps and 1080p or do I need a dedicated graphics card? Hopefully I mentioned everything you need and you can help me out here What kind of CPU is good for a smooth gaming experience? So a dual-core is needed but a quadcore is recommended to run Tasks in the Background.Īs i read through the forum i always saw the i5 2500k but is there something a bit cheaper that can do what I want? So basically my question is, if the games I want to play will run smoothly at 60 fps in 1080. I usually meet up with friends and we play on a Game Cube and Wii which would be fine but as I have seen that an emulator can push the Resolution to a whole new level (especially for the Game Cube) we want to try it out. Currently I discovered dolphin and gaming on my Laptop which works but now I want a bit more and build me a little Emulating-Machine. ![]()
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