Will my mb bottleneck a 1080?

BigEarl92

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Jun 24, 2017
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Will my ASUS H97 plus bottleneck a gtx 1080 or gtx 1070? Just wondering if i should upgrade my motherboard first or not?
 
Solution


It depends on what CPU your are using on that H97-chipset motherboard, what games you are playing, what in-game graphics settings you are using, and at what resolution/refresh rate your monitor is displaying.

If your CPU plugged in the Asus H97 is an i3-4xxx, then, that CPU won't be able to handle those powerful GTX 1070 and GTX 1080 GPUs without hindering its performance.

If your CPU is an i5-4xxx, then, you it is unlikely it will hinder those GPUs graphics performance (except in very CPU-intensive games on lower resolutions).

If your CPU is an i7-4xxx, then, you won't have any problems...


It depends on what CPU your are using on that H97-chipset motherboard, what games you are playing, what in-game graphics settings you are using, and at what resolution/refresh rate your monitor is displaying.

If your CPU plugged in the Asus H97 is an i3-4xxx, then, that CPU won't be able to handle those powerful GTX 1070 and GTX 1080 GPUs without hindering its performance.

If your CPU is an i5-4xxx, then, you it is unlikely it will hinder those GPUs graphics performance (except in very CPU-intensive games on lower resolutions).

If your CPU is an i7-4xxx, then, you won't have any problems pairing any of those aforementioned GPUs to reach its max. graphics potential.

The GTX 1070 is a GPU ideal for 1440p/~60Hz or 1080p/~100+Hz AAA gaming on Ultra/Max. detail settings.

The GTX 1080 is ideal for 1440p/~100+Hz or 1080p/~144+Hz AAA gaming on Ultra/Max. detail settings.

Actual FPS (frames per second) output will entirely depend on the actual game, environment/scenarios within the game, and the specific in-game graphic detail settings you are using.

The H97 (4th-gen Intel platform) is still a good/powerful platform to use in this day and age. No need to upgrade this as it will be costly for you (buying new motherboard, new CPU, and new DDR4 RAM).
 
Solution
The i7-4790K you have is a very powerful CPU, despite it being an older 4th-gen Intel. You don't need to change the CPU (and MB/RAM) for your to be able to enjoy gaming on a GTX 1080 (or even GTX 1080 Ti). That'll save you a lot of expenses by using the same CPU, MB, and DDR3 RAM you have. Just upgrade the GPU (if you are thinking of upgrading your monitor to a 1440p or a 1080p with faster refresh rates).

Since you have an R9 290X, upgrading that to a GTX 1070 will see just about a ~40% increase in performance (http://gpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Nvidia-GTX-1070-vs-AMD-R9-290X/3609vs2166), as the R9 290X is already a powerful GPU (meant for 1080p/60Hz AAA max. gaming), comparable to a GTX 1060-6GB. So, if you'd be gaming on 1080p/60Hz, you don't need to change the GPU at all.

If, however, you'd see yourself gaming on 1080p/144Hz (~140+ fps) or 1440p/60++Hz, then consider getting a GTX 1080 (instead of the GTX 1070) for higher performance gains. Coming from an R9 290X to a GTX 1080 will see a ~75% increase in effective speed (http://gpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Nvidia-GTX-1080-vs-AMD-R9-290X/3603vs2166).

So, TL;DR

Gaming at 1080p/60Hz ultra settings ---> Keep your current CPU, MB, RAM, and GPU
Gaming at 1080p/144Hz or 1440p/120Hz ultra settings ---> Upgrade GPU to GTX 1080. Keep current CPU, MB, and RAM.