[SOLVED] Xeon for a gaming CPU

mangaman

Honorable
I'm thinking of putting the E3-1231 v3 into my system, as a replacement for my Pentium G3258. I was going to put an i5 4690k, but seeing how it only has 4 cores and 4 threads, compared to the E3-1231 v3 which has 4 cores and 8 threads, I'm heavily leaning on the Xeon.

I'm going to be playing games such as the Witcher 3, BeamNG, Yakuza 0 and CitySkylines as my main forms of entertainment. However, I'll also be doing plenty of virtual machines, such as VMware workstation and such.

I know the Xeon is meant as a server grade CPU, but seeing game play videos comparing an i7 4790k to the Xeon, I'm fairly impressed by it.

Thoughts on this CPU as a gaming and workstation solution?
 
Solution
The 1231v3 is pretty much a Xeon equivalent of an i7-4770. The 4770 has a 100MHz higher boost clock, but that's mostly it.

For the ~$70(ish) selling prices I see on eBay, it makes a lot more sense than it's i7 counterparts (4770, 4770K, 4790, 4790K) which routinely sell for close to doubt the price ($120+), and it's only nominal more money than a 4690K (seems to be ~$50)

Compared to a modern platform such as Ryzen, with it's higher core/thread count... it's not going to be phenomenal, but from where you're stepping up from, it should be night & day.
The 1231v3 is pretty much a Xeon equivalent of an i7-4770. The 4770 has a 100MHz higher boost clock, but that's mostly it.

For the ~$70(ish) selling prices I see on eBay, it makes a lot more sense than it's i7 counterparts (4770, 4770K, 4790, 4790K) which routinely sell for close to doubt the price ($120+), and it's only nominal more money than a 4690K (seems to be ~$50)

Compared to a modern platform such as Ryzen, with it's higher core/thread count... it's not going to be phenomenal, but from where you're stepping up from, it should be night & day.
 
Solution
The 1231v3 is pretty much a Xeon equivalent of an i7-4770. The 4770 has a 100MHz higher boost clock, but that's mostly it.

For the ~$70(ish) selling prices I see on eBay, it makes a lot more sense than it's i7 counterparts (4770, 4770K, 4790, 4790K) which routinely sell for close to doubt the price ($120+), and it's only nominal more money than a 4690K (seems to be ~$50)

Compared to a modern platform such as Ryzen, with it's higher core/thread count... it's not going to be phenomenal, but from where you're stepping up from, it should be night & day.

Ya, the i7's that I'm looking at are $120-150 which is just way too much. Not only should the Xeon be good in gaming, but it also should be much better in virtualization compared to the i5.
 

TRENDING THREADS