Could be worth it in two or three years when you may be able to get a 5800X for $200.Am4 motherboard will only support until 5000 series. But I guess is not worth to upgrade until the 6000 series.
Could be worth it in two or three years when you may be able to get a 5800X for $200.Am4 motherboard will only support until 5000 series. But I guess is not worth to upgrade until the 6000 series.
I guess I leave it be for nowCould be worth it in two or three years when you may be able to get a 5800X for $200.
oI guess I leave it be for now
Your Ryzen 5 will be good for a long time. As long as you are not having any issues with it, you don't need an upgrade.I guess I leave it be for now
Thanks bro i was about to ask the same question in toms, i too own a vanilla 3600, till now its giving decent fps in all the games in played like odyssey, warzone, FC 5. so i think we can wait and buy an 5800X in 2 years time for low price like Invalid said.I use r5 3600 for like 3 months, is it worth to upgrade to 5600x?
Bro i even heard that an Ryzen 5 3600 is able to keep up with the RTX 3080, without much noted bottleneck, is that true?Is 20% extra performance worth $300 to you? I know it is nowhere near enough to me, needs at least one more significant digit.
When benchmarked the way people actually game, yes that's true. The thing is, reviewers benchmark CPU's at abnormally low resolution with mismatched (in terms of market segment) GPU's like 3080 to exaggerate CPU differences.Bro i even heard that an Ryzen 5 3600 is able to keep up with the RTX 3080, without much noted bottleneck, is that true?
20% more performance won't significantly change the way I do anything, I need something closer to 200% to feel like the boat anchors fell off. I'm still using an i5-3470, still not really feeling upgrade-itchy when I look at how little performance per dollar has increased since compared to how fast it was improving before then.Yes, we say "my CPU covers my needs fully ... is only 20% performance difference..". But then, we know 20% can be a lot and actually is!
You might be able to sell your 3600 for $170 if you have box and cooler.I use r5 3600 for like 3 months, is it worth to upgrade to 5600x?
20% more performance won't significantly change the way I do anything, I need something closer to 200% to feel like the boat anchors fell off. I'm still using an i5-3470, still not really feeling upgrade-itchy when I look at how little performance per dollar has increased since compared to how fast it was improving before then.
It depends on what you do with your computer - if I was only playing much older games and watching movies on top of desktop work, my Athlon X4 620 would still be perfectly capable with some overclock, extra RAM and a sata SSD. Actually I still use it for just that.20% more performance won't significantly change the way I do anything, I need something closer to 200% to feel like the boat anchors fell off. I'm still using an i5-3470, still not really feeling upgrade-itchy when I look at how little performance per dollar has increased since compared to how fast it was improving before then.
Im in the same boat.. but if what im seeing on youtube is right the answer is complicated but depending on what games you play..I use r5 3600 for like 3 months, is it worth to upgrade to 5600x?
I'm not noticing stutter all that much. Most major stutter I have seen in the past is due to games needing to load stuff from HDD and not having enough RAM to cache all of that data for fast access. Not a problem with 32GB RAM. The only game I particularly care about is WoW and that still runs at ~70fps when I turn fps limit off and lower graphics a little bit, not a problem. For more CPU-intensive games, taking fps from 45-50 to 60 is not worth a ~$800 upgrade to me.And i thought i was a holdout on my 3770k @4.4GHz
Not worried about stuttering in games? We both know you can get a 200% uplift. But you'll pay for it.
I'm not noticing stutter all that much. Most major stutter I have seen in the past is due to games needing to load stuff from HDD and not having enough RAM to cache all of that data for fast access. Not a problem with 32GB RAM. The only game I particularly care about is WoW and that still runs at ~70fps when I turn fps limit off and lower graphics a little bit, not a problem. For more CPU-intensive games, taking fps from 45-50 to 60 is not worth a ~$800 upgrade to me.
Well, all of my characters are on Alliance and I don't PvPI should play with you sometime Invalid on WoW. I have a level 66 Paladin. I also have a level 52 Blood Elf Tank