We recently published a review of Cyberpower's Gamer Dragon, a Phenom II 955-based gaming PC equipped with DDR3 RAM and a pair of Radeon HD 4890s in CrossFire. The Cyberpower Gamer Dragon was delivered to us with a nice 3.6 GHz overclock, and when we considered what we should compare this system to, our first thought was our recent $1,300 System Builder Marathon (SBM) machine. With an Intel Core i7-920 and two GeForce GTX 260s in SLI, the cost of the components for the two builds was similar. The comparison also addressed one of the primary complaints we received when we chose the i7 over the Phenom II for our SBM build: that the Phenom II would have been a better choice for a gaming rig, because its lower price tag would have enabled us to add better graphics cards with the budget available. Since the graphics subsystem is often the limiting factor for game performance, a cheaper AMD processor coupled with a higher-powered graphics card would have offered a better fit for gaming, according to the reader feedback.On paper, two Radeon HD 4890s best a pair of GeForce GTX 260s, so I was satisfied that the scenario would make for a great comparison of Phenom II versus Core i7 gaming value. I merrily proceeded to take benchmarks, record the findings, and form conclusions based on the data. It seemed like the perfect opportunity to investigate the matter, and after all was said and done, my conclusion was that the Core i7-920 beat the Phenom II by a fairly substantial margin. When a budget allows for a powerful dual-graphics card setup, the Core i7 appeared to be the ideal choice, while the Phenom II was a better pick for machines in a lower price range, which the Core i7 can't touch.
Well I look at it a bit different eh.They paid extra attention to making both builds cost around the same. Look at what happened...The i7 coupled with a pair of inferior (relatively) cards still beat the amd system with superior cards in almost all cases and a lot of the time by a large margin.Now this tells me a couple things...1) i7 ftw because it can take less (4870 as opposed to 4890) and make more (fps wise) - agreed2) If the price drops of video cards continue, those 4870's they used for the Intel could very well be replaced by 4890's - keeping in mind that the price on the 4890 would also decrese and thus the AMD rig would also decrease in price so this is moot.3) The Phenom II was overclocked a good bit more than the i7 to achieve the scores it did, leaving the i7 plenty of headroom for more performance. - agreed4) In other, non gaming tasks, the extra cpu performance with the Intel wtfpwns amd. No contest there. - agreed, but this wasn't ever in questionSo to summarise...BOTH systems in this case cost basically the same (the AMD system is almost 100USD cheaper) so there can be no b1tching that "Intel cost more it too expensive" (I believe I just did)With Intel, you get more bang in general computing AND in games EVEN with slower cards. To me, gentlemen, the choice is clear. MY choice is clear.Intel ftmfwkthxbye
Well good to see that he rethought the test process, didn't reveal anything we didn't already knowAMD==Budget gaminIntel==Top dawg @ top priceI just want to put my thoughts out on some things you said capn.Quote from: Captain Awesome on July 14, 2009, 05:05:22 PMWell I look at it a bit different eh.They paid extra attention to making both builds cost around the same. Look at what happened...The i7 coupled with a pair of inferior (relatively) cards still beat the amd system with superior cards in almost all cases and a lot of the time by a large margin.Now this tells me a couple things...1) i7 ftw because it can take less (4870 as opposed to 4890) and make more (fps wise) - agreed2) If the price drops of video cards continue, those 4870's they used for the Intel could very well be replaced by 4890's - keeping in mind that the price on the 4890 would also decrese and thus the AMD rig would also decrease in price so this is moot.3) The Phenom II was overclocked a good bit more than the i7 to achieve the scores it did, leaving the i7 plenty of headroom for more performance. - agreed4) In other, non gaming tasks, the extra cpu performance with the Intel wtfpwns amd. No contest there. - agreed, but this wasn't ever in questionSo to summarise...BOTH systems in this case cost basically the same (the AMD system is almost 100USD cheaper) so there can be no b1tching that "Intel cost more it too expensive" (I believe I just did)With Intel, you get more bang in general computing AND in games EVEN with slower cards. To me, gentlemen, the choice is clear. MY choice is clear.Intel ftmfwkthxbye
One more thing. They did make mention of the even CHEAPER AM2+ platform which btw can build a comparative (performance wise) rig for another 100USD less. What I am getting at is they could just as easily taken a AM2+ 790FX mobo and the Phenom II 940 (AM2+) and of course the cheaper DDR2, and that would further increase the cost difference and still obtain the SAME gaming performance. With that in mind capn, would you sau the AMD rig at 200USD LESS but performing as it did in the review is a waste?
Then in that case, we can bring out a ASUS P5QL PRO and a Q6600 which is comparable in price to a GIGABYTE GA-MA790X and and AMD Phenom II X4 940 If you check you have mismatched these boards altogether and I would know since yuh quote MY MOTHERBOAD, which UNLIKE the INTEL mobo you listed has 2x16x PCIe 2.0. Your P5QL has 1 16x PCI 2.0 If you want to compare apples to apples then I suggest the ASUS M4A78 Plus which has a single 16x slot and oh btw, its $79.99 at the time of posting this reply. NEXT...but I GUARANTEE that am2 system eh want nothing performance wise with that q66 (which, lets not forget, will blow away even that 955 phenom when overclocked. Dead platform, yes, but which one performs better? Do you prefer to go with a newer platform and get less prformance of with an older platform and get more?You absolutely sure about this? Phenom II is clock for clock as good as Q6600 - Arc some input hereFor future reference, the prices of the components im pointing out are as follows...So lets try this again:IntelQ6600: $200ASUS P5QL PRO: $87Intel Total = $287AMD Phenom II X4 940: $175GIGABYTE GA-MA790X: $110ASUS M4A78 Plus: $79.99AMD Total = $255(It is assumed that all other parts are platform independent)So to answer your question, yes, that am2 system would also be a waste.right...