I know what I was looking for !!

Badmutha

Reputable
Aug 23, 2015
9
0
4,510
I already haver a 990 FXA UD3 mobo with a 970 GTX SLI graphics set up . Even with this and a 9590 Amd cpu I still require more cpu power and also better graphics and the cpu are getting stronger with the Xeon 4's on the way. I was just wondering with all the new releases which mobo for a dual intel cpu has the best chipset for graphics and gaming / streaming . The intel chipset is interesting but are they any stronger in cpu processing . Also is there a mobo with less bottlenecks ??
 
Solution
EDITED:

So much to say here, where do I start.

Intel is not a chipset, Intel is a company. They make different CPUs that belong to a generation of architecture (like skylake or haswell).


Dual CPU systems are not intended or designed for gaming, they are designed for servers. A single skylake xeon or i7 will more then exceed the needs of any game on the market. Motherboards with dual CPU sockets will not be optimized for gaming at all, and for gaming/streaming the extra CPU will be about as useful as having a 500hp engine while driving in a school zone.

Don't know what you are referring to in regards to motherboard bottlenecks? Regardless it is the device plugged into the motherboard that determines the speed, not the other way...
EDITED:

So much to say here, where do I start.

Intel is not a chipset, Intel is a company. They make different CPUs that belong to a generation of architecture (like skylake or haswell).


Dual CPU systems are not intended or designed for gaming, they are designed for servers. A single skylake xeon or i7 will more then exceed the needs of any game on the market. Motherboards with dual CPU sockets will not be optimized for gaming at all, and for gaming/streaming the extra CPU will be about as useful as having a 500hp engine while driving in a school zone.

Don't know what you are referring to in regards to motherboard bottlenecks? Regardless it is the device plugged into the motherboard that determines the speed, not the other way around. The only real limiting factors in a motherboard are number of PCI-E lanes, how good is the vrm for overclocking, and what ports it has.
 
Solution

TRENDING THREADS