haciendo de esta una posible respuesta al rendimiento de juego del i9-12900KS 7 5800Nintendo Gaming Console Switch Lite Amarillo
The two platforms were tested in 11 different games at 720p and 1080p. To spoil the excitement, it’s a dead race between the two CPUs in most games at 1080p, with Intel being ahead by about 1-3 FPS in the games where AMD loses out. Sin embargo, in the games AMD takes the lead, it’s by a good 10 FPS or more, with games like the Witcher 3 and Final Fantasy XV seeing an advantage of 40-50 FPS. AMD often has an advantage when it comes to the one percent low numbers, even when Intel is ahead when it comes to the average FPS, but this doesn’t apply to all of the games. It’s worth keeping in mind that the Intel CPU should gain extra performance when paired with DDR5 memory in some of these games, but we’ll have to wait for more reviews to see by how much. The benchmarks displayed are mostly the games TPU normally tests with, but aren’t the entirety of games tested by XanxoGaming.
As for the 720p tests, AMD only loses out in Strange Brigade, even though it’s a loss of over 20 FPS on average FPS and by over 10 FPS when it comes to the one percent low frames. As for the other games, it’s mostly a dead race here too, but with an advantage to AMD instead of Intel by 1-3 FPS. Sin embargo, the 3D V-Cache seems to kick in here when it comes to the one percent low frames, as AMD edges out Intel by a large margin in more games here by at least 10 FPS, often by around 30 FPS or more. Take these benchmarks for what they are, an early, unconfirmed test of the Ryzen 7 5800X3D. We’re just over a week away from the launch and we should be seeing a lot more benchmarks by then. Head over to XanxoGaming for the full set of tests and their conclusion, especially as they made an effort to write the test in English this time around.