Today we're running a massive gaming benchmark comparison between the Ryzen 7 5800X3D and Core i9-12900K. We'll be comparing the two head to head across 40 games at 1080p, 1440p and 4K, using a wide range of games from battle royale to real-time strategy titles, so there should be something for everyone.
Starting with Valorant, using medium quality settings given this is a competitive title, the 5800X3D pushes the RTX 3090 Ti to 668 fps on average at 1080p making it 15% faster than the 12900K, using DDR5-6400 memory, or 32% faster when comparing the 1% low data which is a significant performance improvement, though the Core i9 processor did allow for well over 300 fps at all times in our testing.
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Fortnite also favors the 5800X3D at 1080p and 1440p, though it does more so for the average frame rate than the 1% lows. Here the Ryzen 7 processor was up to 11% faster and it's not until we jump up to the 4K resolution that the margin is neutralized and now both CPUs are limited to the same level of performance.
Next we have Call of Duty Warzone, and this title appears to play better with the higher clocked Core i9-12900K which pushed the average frame rate at 1080p 17% higher with a 21% boost to 1% lows and these margins were roughly the same at 1440p. Even at 4K, the Core i9 processor enjoyed a reasonably significant performance advantage and while it is difficult to get accurate numbers with these multiplayer titles, this data is based on a 3-run average.
Moving on to Assetto Corsa Competizione, this one heavily favors the 5800X3D, boosting performance at 1080p and 1440p over the 12900K by around 24%, though only up to 13% for the 1% lows. Then by the time we reach 4K the game becomes entirely GPU limited using the RTX 3090 Ti with the medium quality settings.
Apex Legends runs slightly better on the 5800X3D, offering a small performance advantage over the 12900K, even at 4K. We're looking at a 4% increase at 1080p, 6% at 1440p and 5% at 4K. Certainly not a difference you'll notice, but the AMD CPU is technically faster here.
F1 2021 was tested using the high quality preset and we're looking at well over 300 fps at 1080p. The 5800X3D was technically faster, but we're talking about a small 3% boost to the average frame rate and a 7% increase in 1% lows. At 1440p the 12900K jumped ahead by a mere 3%, and at the GPU limited 4K resolution performance was identical.
Starting with the 1080p results, we see that the 5800X3D was just 1% faster on average, but that's an impressive result given the Ryzen processor is using DDR4-3800 CL16 memory, while the 12900K was paired with much more expensive DDR5-6400 CL32 memory. The 5800X3D enjoyed big wins in ACC, Valorant, The Outer Worlds and Death Stranding, while it was 14% slower in Hitman 3 and Warzone.
Starting with Valorant, we find a solid performance uplift from the 5800X3D. An 18% increase for the average frame rate at 1080p and a 24% boost to 1% slows and similar figures were also seen at then the 5800X3D will probably appeal to you.
Even at 4K, the 5800X3D was up to 19% faster which is remarkable and although most competitive players target 1080p, or maybe 1440p, I certainly appreciate the boost at 4K as this is where I play Fortnite.
Call of Duty Warzone players rocking a Zen 3 processor will see a substantial performance uplift with the 5800X3D when CPU bound. Here the new 3D V-Cache model was up to 26% faster, inline with what was seen in Fortnite. This margin was seen at 1080p and 1440p when looking at the 1% lows, though the game became entirely GPU limited at 4K.
Interestingly, very little improvement was seen in Apex Legends, at most a 9% increase to 1% lows was seen at 1080p, with a 3% boost to the average frame rate. For those of you primarily playing Apex, the 5800X3D isn't going to be worth the investment.
Battlefield V ran significantly faster with the 5800X3D, boosting 1% lows by 33% at 1080p and the average frame rate by a whopping 41%. Even at 1440p, we're looking at a 30% improvement in 1% lows and a 21% increase for the average frame rate. Then at 4K, we're still looking at up to a 14% boost for the 3D V-Cache, an impressive set of results.
F1 2021 is another game that saw strong performance gains for the 5800X3D. This time 1% lows were improved by 40% at 1080p and a more mild but still impressive 17% increase for the average frame rate. Then at 1440p, the 1% lows were boosted by 22% with just a 5% increase for the average frame rate, and then no performance gains were seen at 4K.
Moving on to Halo Infinite, we're looking at a 35% improvement for the 1% lows at 1080p and a 23% increase to the average frame rate. Those margins were reduced to 22% for the 1% lows and just 6% for the average frame rate before seeing performance basically neutralized at 4K. The boost from the 5800X3D at 1080p and 1440p is quite significant as it meant 1% lows were now above 100 fps.
Even with slightly dialed down quality settings, Red Dead Redemption 2 is mostly GPU bound, as seen at 1440p and 4K. There are some gains to be had at 1080p where the 5800X3D was up to 16% faster, so a good uplift there, though we suspect under most gaming conditions there will be little to no difference between these two CPUs on this title.
At 1080p the 1% lows were improved by an incredible 57% margin and although the uplift to the average frame rate was less extreme, a 22% boost is still impressive. The margins shrink at 1440p and are almost entirely eliminated at 4K.
In Death Stranding it's the 1% lows that are improved the most with the 5800X3D, boosting performance at 1080p by 31% with a 14% increase to the average frame rate. The 5800X3D remained up to 20% faster at 1440p before hitting a GPU limited brick wall at 4K.
At 1080p, the Ryzen 5 5800X3D delivered an average 15% performance bump over the original 5800X, which is impressive and inline with AMD's claims. Out of the 41 titles, just 10 saw performance gains of 5% or less, which we deem insignificant.
MacBook Air features a new, strikingly thin design in four beautiful finishes, larger 13.6-inch Liquid Retina display, 1080p HD camera, MagSafe charging, and moreM2 also comes to the 13-inch MacBook Pro with 24GB of fast unified memory, ProRes acceleration, and up to 20 hours of battery life
MacBook Air includes a new 1080p FaceTime HD camera with a larger image sensor and more efficient pixels that deliver twice the resolution and low-light performance of the previous generation. Combined with the processing power of the advanced image signal processor on M2, users will look great on video calls.
Most TVs sold these days have a 4k resolution, except for a handful of 8k options and a few 720p or 1080p TVs. Since a lot of streaming content is in 4k, it's beneficial to have a 4k TV because it doesn't have to upscale anything. There are many factors you have to consider when looking for the best TV with a 4k resolution, including where you're going to watch TV. OLED models are ideal for watching content in dark rooms, while LEDs get much brighter if you want to use them in a well-lit room. Choosing one TV over the next can come down to personal preference, and there's no perfect choice.
You would be hard-pressed to tell the difference between 1080p and 4K resolution when looking at a normal camera image. The one major benefit of 4K resolution is the ability to resolve detail after the fact, which means that users can zoom in on details such as faces while the recording of a security event plays. However, while 4K resolution offers some benefits, it also brings with it some drawbacks. 4K images are very large and take up a lot of recording storage space. So much, in fact, that they need about four times the hard drive space of 1080p to record the same length of video footage. Be prepared to spend more money if extended video storage is important.
After wrapping up our RTX 3050 review, we took our results and stacked them up against the RTX 3060. Both cards target 1080p AAA gaming, promising 60 frames per second (fps) in the latest big-budget titles, but only one card earned a spot in our roundup of the best 1080p graphics cards.
Here's what we saw in our bank of gaming tests with our GeForce RTX 2080 Ti card running the show. This top-end consumer graphics card is the primary arbiter of performance at 4K with all of the CPUs that we have laid out below. At 1080p, though, the card gets out of the way a bit more and lets the CPU differences shine.
Well, as the gamer of the bunch, the Ryzen 5 5600X just had to put down its stamp with a new record, 727fps, at our test settings. This is higher than both the $549 Ryzen 9 5900X and the $488 Intel Core i9-10900K, and it showcases the insights of AMD's engineers in their best light. In fact, there were only a couple of instances where the Intel Core i9-10900K outright beat the Ryzen 5 5600X in gaming frame rates, and more often than not the Core i9-10900K is practically tied at 1080p to a chip nearly that's 40% less expensive at MSRP (not including the price of upgrading to an LGA 1200 motherboard).
Strictly as a budget gaming engine, though, the $120 AMD Ryzen 3 3300X frees up a hefty chunk of cash that could get shifted to a better graphics card or another stick of RAM without a ton of frame loss. It's behind the Ryzen 5 5600X in most of our 1080p runs, but at less than half the price (if you can find one in stock!), it holds its own as a viable option if you're looking for a better balance between the power of the CPU and GPU in the case of 1440p or 4K gaming.
The Ryzen 5 5600X is a six-core shredder that smooths over the last of the few flaws we saw from Zen 2 and the Ryzen 5 3600X, and it solidifies AMD as the premier desktop CPU manufacturer of 2020 in every way. It's a monster for gaming in 1080p, runs at a lower TDP than the competition, is backward-compatible with older motherboards (or likely will be soon, depending on your board's manufacturer), and comes with a bundled cooler as the CPU cherry on top. 2ff7e9595c
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