kevin83
Distinguished
I don't see how your reasoning overcomes the numbers. In a stock clocks comparison the Pentium G3258 beat out the Athlon x4 860k in all but 2 of the tested games (the exceptions were battlefield hardline and hitman absolution), and there were some games that clearly suffered bugs on AMD systems. At stock the Pentium G4500 is 300mhz faster than the G3258, plus you have the IPC improvements. On top of that you get an integrated graphics solution and the ability to slot into H170 and Z170 motherboards, which have great new technologies like PCIe based M.2. You want to build a blazing fast home media server? You can slot a Samsung 950 pro into an H170 motherboard with a Pentium G4500 for about $500 or $650 for 512gb of space. You can't do that on AMD hardware.
Whoever is saying that you can't put 4 game threads on 2 cores has no idea how CPU scheduling works. Also running a lot of additional background programs is a single use case. Windows 8 and later have defender built in for antivirus anyway, and Windows 7 has it as an optional update. For someone who understands how to manage Windows' background processes and not install too many apps, the Pentium G4500 is a great solution.
Whoever is saying that you can't put 4 game threads on 2 cores has no idea how CPU scheduling works. Also running a lot of additional background programs is a single use case. Windows 8 and later have defender built in for antivirus anyway, and Windows 7 has it as an optional update. For someone who understands how to manage Windows' background processes and not install too many apps, the Pentium G4500 is a great solution.