So definitely intel you would say and the stronger the better? And will that help eith powerpoint raid fights hahahaahFlyingSwan wrote: »It is CPU bound, it likes clock speed as the game is poorly multi-threaded. My GTX1080Ti is only 50% used as my 8700K cannot send it data fast enough for the GPU to feel busy.
duje.majmuneb17_ESO wrote: »So definitely intel you would say and the stronger the better? And will that help eith powerpoint raid fights hahahaahFlyingSwan wrote: »It is CPU bound, it likes clock speed as the game is poorly multi-threaded. My GTX1080Ti is only 50% used as my 8700K cannot send it data fast enough for the GPU to feel busy.
What kind of reg modifications you did? And what settings are you using?It indeed is CPU based. With reg modifications you can run custom ultra settings at 144 fps everywhere except raid being 80-100 in 1440p.

It depends on the situation. If someone plans to run emulators, like PCSX2 or Dolphin, for example, the CPU will be more relevant. For poor optimized game engines, CPU relevance is higher than normal too. You need a good CPU to play ESO properly, but I agree that something like a last gen Core i7 or Core i9 doesn't seem to be necessary. Searching online we can find people with configurations like Core i7 6700K and GTX 1080Ti with FPS drops as well. The ESO's engine really has problems. >.<Anotherone773 wrote: »Both CPU are GPU are important. CPU is not as important as people here make out. The GPU actually is far better at math calculations than a CPU. This is why one of the measurements of a GPU is in FLOPs. FLOPs are Floating Point Operations which are math calculations. A CPU is for general processing. and will do a lot of grunt work like unpack and load various data files. But it doesnt do near the work of the GPU.
If we were talking about AMD FX CPUs, I would agree with you. But Ryzen changed things a lot. These Intel quad core processors are starting to be obsolete for modern AAA titles. They hit 100% usage and stutter happens. Core i5 7400 and Core i3 8100 are poor choices since the Ryzen 5 1600 can be found at a close price. Yes, these two CPUs would propably win in FPS average when compared to Ryzen 5 1600, but some facts have to be considered before choosing:Anotherone773 wrote: »*You want a good CPU not only for this game but just for general performance reasons in general. I would go with an I5 or I7 8th gen. A late 7th gen will be fine as well. As you can see from above my earlier 7th gen that gets pretty low bench marks compared to current 8th gen( i think im about half benchmark wise) is just breaking a sweat to run the game. I dont recommend AMD CPUs. They are not near as good as Intel.
I don't think the word "quality" fits in there. The last two numbers symbolize the performance level of the card, or its class in the generation.Anotherone773 wrote: »* For you GPU it really depends on how much graphics matter to you in your gaming. I dont need my graphics to be top of the line So i would go with a Nvidia 1060 or 1070. I should note the last two numbers symbolize the quality of the card and first number symbolizes the "generation" So my GTX 650 would be the 6 generation of the GTX series and the 50 would mean it is the lowest quality. 80 is typically the highest quality. You get a decent amount of improvement for an upgrade from a 50 to a 60 and then less bang for your buck from 60 to 70 and a lot less from 70 to 80. I dont recommend buying 80s because they are absolutely a waste of money. You will pay as much for one as a new basic pc and in 2 years it will be out of date and on par with $200 or $300 card.
Also, ESO runs fine with 8GB of ram, even if the user opens browser and other things while gaming. For general gaming, it is the minimum and I would recommend at least 12GB too.Anotherone773 wrote: »Memory. You need double the recommended memory of your OS just to perform basic tasks, quadruple that at minimum for any kind of gaming or cpu/gpu intensive program. For ESO i would go nothing short of 12 GB of memory and recommend at least 16 or more. ESO has a memory leak and you will start out at around 2GB used but play for an hour or two and you will be to 3 or 3.5 GB and possibly higher depending on what you are doing in the game. Memory also serves as the buffer between the very slow hard drive and the CPU. More memory means your CPU can work more efficiently. There is no sense in getting a good CPU and skimping on memory.
SSD is a must have for better use experience with a computer, no doubts. I highly recommend it. But I don't think it will give a performance boost in ESO other than reducing loading screens.Anotherone773 wrote: »The harddrive is typically the king of congestion. Mechanical HDDs are slow as arms have to search platters for information much like a record player. This mechanical movement greatly slows down access times especially on HDDs that are more than 50% full and are not often defragmented. SSD is a much better option and the newer versions are built more with program access in mind rather than long term storage making them even better. Intel also has an Optane card which basically is designed as a high performance temporary drive that feeds the very efficient DRAM modules used for memory. The Optane is better at this job than current SSD but only marginally and cost much more per GB than an SSD.
It fits perfectly you are just trying to be more technical than me. I could go in to explaining how CPUs and GPUs and "cards" are manufactured but i wont. Basically think of processors like diamonds. Some diamonds are nearly flawless and some have flaws. They have differently level of quality. The same is true of processors. Some processors have higher quality than others even though they are identical. So you end up with different levels of quality across cards. Thus you come to XX50, XX60,XX70, etc. Nvidia doesnt intentionally make lower quality cards. Rather the XX50 will be the standard and anything below that will be recycled. The XX60 and above designations will be cards that see slightly above average, above average and greatly above average performance consistently and will be marked as such as a card/processor is tested to see which standard it can achieve in the series consistently without failures.I don't think the word "quality" fits in there. The last two numbers symbolize the performance level of the card, or its class in the generation.
I run ESO with 8 GB of ram and a raid 0 HDD and with Chrome running with a few tabs, i run 70-90% memory used depending on what stage of memory leak ESO is at. I would not say it runs fine, Id say it runs but not fine. How good it will run on 8GB depends a lot on the rest of your pc.Also, ESO runs fine with 8GB of ram, even if the user opens browser and other things while gaming. For general gaming, it is the minimum and I would recommend at least 12GB too.
The most obvious will be shorter loading screens. There are not so obvious improvements that most people wont notice( because they are actively playing). Though you can pay attention to how much your DD is used during play you will notice just how often your CPU is accessing the DD. For people who bounce all over the place in the game and experience loading screens so often, like me who keeps a slots game up on my phone while i wait for load screens, the difference will be far more noticeable than someone who hangs out at the bank, in their house, or a dolmen for hours on end and rarely goes anywhere new.SSD is a must have for better use experience with a computer, no doubts. I highly recommend it. But I don't think it will give a performance boost in ESO other than reducing loading screens.
duje.majmuneb17_ESO wrote: »Appriciate the help guys but im not that hard rolling in cash that i can drop 500euro on a 9900k and pair it with a 250euro MB and and 150 euro on a nvme ssd(250gigs) that is like only a bit better in speed then a normal ssd for double the price. And intel is soo much more expensive then ryzen and upgrade path is bad in my oppinion
I5 9600k 260 euro and you have to get a z-mobo for atleast 130 euros and plus a 30 euro cooler. Ryzen is just way cheaper and unlocked at start so i will for sure go ryzen (2nd or 3rd gen we will see on the launch) and ofcourse 16gb ram 3000 mhz or 3200.
Going intel just makes no sense for me since my buget isnt that large to dream about a 350 euro i7 or 500 euro i9.
eForce® GTX 1060 3G Lol what a waste of Money.. take the 6G instead.
I would never recommend something that is new and hasnt been tested yet to someone, especially someone on a budget. The 1660 looks good on paper, but its very thin paper. The Samsung Galaxy S7 also looked good on paper....until the batteries exploded.duje.majmuneb17_ESO wrote: »Both are a waste 1660 crushes them both by alot for a lower price