Dicehunter
Resident Newb
I agree, the difference isn't going to be noticeable unless you dial your resolution all the way up to 4k or something, as a result the regular 290 or 780 are better buys for more sane resolutions.
Heck, if it's only 1080p we're talking about, you're probably not going to notice a difference between the 290X/780Ti and the GTX 770/R9-280X, aside from price that is. I want a R9-290X/290, but if I'm honest my 7950 has plenty life left in it yet.
This is the problem with a lot of hardware out there where diminishing returns kick in, you won't notice the difference in a lot of cases. Countless examples out there, like the i5 vs i7, premium SSDs vs more basic ones etc.
But hey what do I know? I have a hard time (read: I don't) noticing a difference in Games (even Skyrim) between my FX-8350 and my friends i7-2600k with both at stock despite Tech site after Tech site saying the former is a "Crap" gaming CPU, and never recommending it. ^_^
The 8350 is good for gaming, The channel "Tek Syndicate" on youtube did tests and the 8350 was maybe 0.1 of a frame behind in some games compared to an i7, sometimes ahead by a frame and sometimes behind by up to 4-5 frames.
For instance, Using an 8350 against a core i5 3570K with a GTX 670 in farcry 3 the i5 gets 31 fps at 1080p and 18 fps at 1440p.
The 8350 gets 67 fps at 1080p and 44 fps at 1440p.
BUT then you get other games that favor intel and others that favor AMD large amount of cores.
Heres the video, Well worth a watch if your in the market for a new CPU and mobo -
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