Coffee lake is around the corner, leaked benches are very good. Cannon soon after that. Also Nvidia refresh Volta is coming out soon.
Tech is an endless game of waiting mind you. If you need it quick, wait for coffee (very soon, if not already released as I'm writing this) if you can hold off, wait for cannon and volta, not as soon, but some say they might come out this year, or early next.
Intel Cannon and nVidia Volta are a new architecture so the performance increases should be very good, I'm waiting for those for my next rig.
Nemesis7884 wrote: »im playing on 16gb ram (3200); ssd, ryzen 1600x and gtx 1080ti and i get on 4k 60-100 fps
imo if you dont play 4k the most important thing is a good quad core processor with high single core speeds...sure if you want to be more future proof go for 6-8 cores but i'd probably wait for the new intel chips coming out by the end of this year
Peekachu99 wrote: »Nemesis7884 wrote: »im playing on 16gb ram (3200); ssd, ryzen 1600x and gtx 1080ti and i get on 4k 60-100 fps
imo if you dont play 4k the most important thing is a good quad core processor with high single core speeds...sure if you want to be more future proof go for 6-8 cores but i'd probably wait for the new intel chips coming out by the end of this year
Problem with the new chips is that you'll need a new mobo. I went with Ryzen this time since I'll get at least two gens of CPUs out of it, rather than one. I plan on doing an incimental upgrade, too, once the Ryzen successor is announced. So three upgrades really (and a 1080TI successor swap eventually), off one board. PC gaming is only expensive if you buy an Alienware or some other builder's offerings. Otherwise, when you factor in the cost, access to software, and upgrade path, it's cheaper than you think--even for high-spec configurations.
I wish I knew a definite answer for this one too. I am currently using an (ancient, but very high-end in it's day) Q9650 processor with a 20% overclock, paired with a fairly modern GTX970 graphics card. My observations are:
(1) 8GB RAM is an absolute minimum for the 64-bit client. As soon as the PC does anything else, like Windows updates, you can run out of memory or swap to disk. I would recommend going for 16GB.
(2) I run my games from an SSD. Doing so definitely helps with load times, for example district transitions in Imperial City. I believe I am sometimes able to overtake people, because of this.
(3) All Direct X versions up to DX11, which is all that's currently supported by ESO, limit processors to a single thread for scheduling graphics calls. I also suspect (but am not sure) that ESO limits itself to a single thread for dealing with player and NPC movement. Were I to choose a CPU for gaming, I would go for a high-end Intel CPU, since they still have the highest single-threaded performance. Basically an i7-7700K quad core, not a higher core-count part, and not Ryzen, at this point.
(4) At merely Full HD resolution, I suspect a single high-end card isn't really stretched. I would stick with nVidia, right now, since their cards seem to have significantly lower power consumption, and thus heat / noise, than AMDs offerings.
My current frame rates aren't great. Between 40 and 50 at most. 20 or above in IC and PvE, which I feel is the minimum for the game to be playable. I rarely do trials, as I'm a PvPer. In Cyrodiil frame rates can drop as low as 10, and this is a problem. What I'm not sure about is whether the CPU is truly holding me back or the Internet / ZOS servers.
Thank you all so much! I'm a layperson when it comes to tech. Based on what you guys said and some googling I should go for something along the lines of a machine with intel i7 7700 quad core, 16gb, and 1080ti graphics card. A machine like this should be able to handle 2 monitors right (one for game, one for internet/discord) plus keep a steady 60 fps with high graphics setting?
Many modern games, or MMOs? I have the impression the latter tend to be more CPU bound than graphics bound. While ESO is pretty, it is quite bare compared to Skyrim, or even Oblivion. Where are the forests in Cyrodiil?Peekachu99 wrote: »many modern games
Thank you all so much! I'm a layperson when it comes to tech. Based on what you guys said and some googling I should go for something along the lines of a machine with intel i7 7700 quad core, 16gb, and 1080ti graphics card. A machine like this should be able to handle 2 monitors right (one for game, one for internet/discord) plus keep a steady 60 fps with high graphics setting?
Many modern games, or MMOs? I have the impression the latter tend to be more CPU bound than graphics bound. While ESO is pretty, it is quite bare compared to Skyrim, or even Oblivion. Where are the forests in Cyrodiil?Peekachu99 wrote: »many modern games
Players, NPCs and special effects bog down the game. It could be network and server related, but my working theory is that the CPU can also be the bottleneck. I certainly experienced this problem in villages of Dragon Age Inquisition, where there were many NPCs.