Sam_212 :
mr91 :
In conclusion these benchmarks clearly indicate for some games benefit from the extra features and resources of the I7.
Some benchmarks also show that higher clock is also beneficial. There are many more points however I don't think it's necessary to go over them.
I can tell everybody I did testing with different hardware and my upgrade form a 3570k to a 4790k at 4.6 improve min and avg fps in a bunch of new titles...
I have 2x 1440p monitors and i've done testing in both 1080p and 1440p, 60 hz 120 hz 144 hz
If the OP wants to play the latest and greatest titles of today and future titles and does a lot of multi tasking on multiple monitors I'm sure he will be happy coming from an 2500k to a 4790k. The op will also enjoy faster system performance....
Some games? which games? you only mentioned 2 and you were mistaken about both... Ok you replaced your 3570k with i7 4790k, well you have asked for some opinion, and now that you have made this mistake, there is no point in misleading people I think... yeah yeah you have tested that on all types of panels, all types of graphics cards from the custom- made 4k 144hz IPS panel which is non existent but the company just custom made one for you, to a 16 way gtx titanz sli, which was not plausible, but some how they custom made things for you again, so that you can test your side-grade for a gaming rig....well, this is pathetic, it is a shame but it is true, changing i5 to i7 for any gaming rig is a dumb move, like it or not...
Sam_212 :
2500k is just as good as any haswell based CPU, the difference is not that big between 2500k and 4670k for example, so you don't really need the upgrade, save your money for the next gen cpus, that may mean something in the end...as far as WoW is concerned the problem is not for your CPU, it it that the game only uses two cores and not 4 cores, so that makes any negligible advantage of hyper threading (if any) meaningless in this game...I'd say WAIT, and I say that emphatically, but your call in the end
You're being ridicules, I never told you I have 4k 144 hz ips... You can read my specs if you're interested...
Initially you said there will be ZERO benefit in all games for the upgrade from 2500k to a 4790k however I proved that you were wrong and you acknowledged this on more than one occasion in this thread.
The I7 also shined in COD Advanced Warfare when loading and during cut scenes.
" All threads were utilized"
My friends with I5 processors and other people on forums experienced hitching and desynchronization when it was launched. I'm Not sure if the problem still persists.
The Shadow of Mordor test results were based on the in game benchmark which isn't identical to the actual game. This game doesn't require the latest and greatest CPU, this game just uses a lots of Vram.
The anandtech article didn't specify how they did testing and they didn't test the Multiplayer mode of bf4 which is cpu intensive.
The bottom line is if you want the best possible experience when gaming and multitasking an overclocked i7 processor will give you the best experience possible however will not benefit you in all scenarios. Some enthusiast want the best possible experience and are able to afford the premium . There nothing wrong with that.
We should stay on topic and address the OP's issues rather than go off topic.