My initial though was that the GPU was being throttled (due to heat etc) but Precision X reports the GPU is fine. Restart the game and everything is rosy again until a few games later when it tanks and I either need to play through a full session with erratic/shite FPS or get my squad to all bail out and I restart the game). ![]() However for some reason I've been having some very erratic performance issues with Warzone and I was wondering if anyone else is seeing the same thing.?Īfter a round of two of running at 120 FPS (have to drop to 16:9 2560 x 1440 to get that) without issues (~8ms GPU time, ~6ms CPU time), I'll queue up for a new round and when that round starts my FPS will tank, dropping to 55 to 70 FPS (~16ms GPU time, 6ms CPU time) for the entire round. Hi members of the master race! I'm running a pretty high end gaming rig (i7, 2080 ti, 32GB RAM, 3440x1440p 120 hrtz, etc) which handles pretty much every other FPS (COD, PUBG, Apex, etc) just fine (rarely if every dropping below 120 FPS). Temperature never breaches 75 and it usually in the 50’s under load. The cpu is overcloked to 5ghz with a voltage of 3.500v, and avx offset of 0, and an LLC of medium. Any ideas ? I should note that it did this when I first bought it and then I believe stopped so maybe it’s a bios update or something. However in the cpu portion of time spy or if you run a cpu only benchmark like intel diagnostic tool it will run at 5ghz the whole time, so it must think it’s not needed and down clock unless usage is high enough ? This can be fixed by going into windows and turning power management from balanced to high performance so it’s not the end of the world, because I think that’s fine to do ( new to all this ) but my 7700 K never had this behavior so it’s bothering me lol. Hey guys, it’s not really an issue as much as I just want to know why !? So, in game or in bench mark like time spy my 9700k will down clock to stock speeds and 1.2ghz a lot and even as low as the energy saver speed of 800mhz. Overall, the Ryzen 7 5800X3D is a very good performer with its 8-cores and 16-threads in this benchmark. ![]() AMD's Ryzen 7 5800X3D notches a small win over the Ryzen 7 3700X, but opens up an impressive lead over the stock Core i7-12700K. The Ryzen 7 5800X3D yields minor improvements over the similarly-equipped 8-core Ryzen 7 3700X of 12.6%. The Ryzen 7 5800X3D's performance earns it the 3rd place. The Ryzen 7 5800X3D takes a comfortable 0% lead over the Core i7-12700K. It is 0% lower than the Core i5-12600K while being 2.4% higher than the Ryzen 7 5800X. The Ryzen 7 5800X3D sits between Core i5-12600K and Ryzen 7 5800X. Overall, the Core i7-9700K is an average performer with its 8-cores and 8-threads in this benchmark. Intel's Core i7-9700K notches a small win over the Core i7-8700K, but opens up an impressive lead over the stock Ryzen 7 3800X. The Core i7-9700K's performance earns it the 8th place. The Core i7-8700K clearly shows how significantly the high-end Coffee Lake-based CPUs fall behind the Coffee Lake Refresh models. That's a ~3.7% generational speed-up in this title. Again, the Core i7-8700K tumbles down the chart, falling behind its Coffee Lake Refresh-based successor. In this benchmark, the Core i7-9700K has an impressive performance, which is way ahead of the last generation Core i7-8700K by 3.7%. The Core i7-9700K takes a comfortable 4.7% lead over the Ryzen 7 3800X. ![]() ![]() It is 2% lower than the Core i7-10700K while being 3.7% higher than the Core i7-8700K. The Core i7-9700K sits between Core i7-10700K and Core i7-8700K.
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