[citation][nom]computabug[/nom]Once again, Tom has taken Intel's bribe to make Intel appear much more superior...[/citation]
That just doesn't make any sense. Have you read the article?
The phenom II performed excellently, especially at 1920x1200.
As a gaming rig, the tests show it's just as good as the i7. I said that. In each game benchmark I mentioned it if the 955 did well, and since 1920x1200 is the resolution most likely paired with these rigs, I say plain and simple in the conclusion that "Across all of the games and all of the resolutions we tested, the Phenom II system delivered frame rates just as playable as the Core i7 system."
Then - after that - I said:
"Does this mean we recommend staying away from AMD CPUs? Not at all. But AMD's offerings shine below the Core i7's price segment, especially when budgetary constraints mean that buying a Core i7 requires sacrificing a balanced graphics card. We can build a killer Phenom II system for hundreds of dollars less than a Core i7 if we go with an AM2+/DDR2 Phenom II or the Phenom II X3. Also, even more money can be saved if you're willing to settle for a motherboard with one of AMD's more value-oriented chipsets. If this kind of low-cost system is overclocked, we should see gaming results very similar to the ones we saw in our Phenom II X4 955 tests today.
This is where the AMD option makes the most sense: not by going toe-to-toe against the Core i7 at higher prices, but by offering similar gaming utility at a much lower cost. This is also where AMD pulls a rabbit out of its hat, by serving up an alternative for budget gamers who want to build a cost-effective gaming rig."
How could you possibly spin that to equal an intel bribe? I have a feeling that no matter what I did, you'd have come up with the same post.
You've pre-decided the site is biased, friend, and no amount of evidence will convince you otherwise.