this post was submitted on 26 Sep 2023
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Hello everyone. I'm one of those rare sea birds that in 2023 still rides an i7 2600K OCd @ 4.8 GHz since launch day.

I've been poking and experimenting in and out of more recent computers but aside from the GPU upgrade, I haven't really decided to let my i7 2600K retire.

It's just that I can't feel the "fastness" in new builds, however I honestly didn't spend much time with a current gen high end machine.

Seeing as we are getting closer to yet another generation of AMD and Intel's, do you guys think it will be worth it?

My full specs are: i7 2600K @ 4.8 GHz Gskill 32 GB 2133 CL10 DDR3 ASRock Z77 Extreme 6 (I swapped an Asus one year after when Z77 was released) 750W Corsair PSU 2x 500GB Raid0 Samsung Evo 2x 500GB Raid0 Crucial MX500 AMD 6750 XT along with a QHD 27" 165 Hz (started with an HD5870, then TO 380 now RX 6850XT)

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[–] Atemu@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It highly depends on what it is you're doing. If all you do is play graphically intensive single player games at high settings, a 2600k can still be more than fast enough (especially when OC'd).

As always with hardware upgrades, you need to find current issues, measure what causes them and upgrade that component. If there are no issues you're aware of, there's no need to upgrade IMHO.

How high are FPS and GPU usage in your favourite games? If they're rather low and GPU usage is <90%, you're CPU bottlenecked and would likely see an increase in FPS.
GPU usage roughly indicates the headroom; if you're already close to 100% there likely is little point in upgrading because you'd be GPU-bottlenecked immediately after but if it's, say, 50% you'd likely see a great increase in FPS. Then you'll obviously have to ask yourself whether that increase is worth it. If you're at >100fps already, the answer would probably be "no" for instance.

Another factor to consider is power usage but I doubt a current-gen CPU would draw appreciably less power than a 2600K. I mean, it's OC'd, so you're probably in the neighbourhood of 120-150W I'd imagine but that's not unheard of nowadays either and your GPU is likely a much larger factor.

[–] blacklionpt@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

It's mostly single player platformer games and web development really (and tv shows with the SVP player project to watch with frame generation) maybe that's why the system I still so much usable !

[–] HidingCat@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Well that should explain it (maybe web dev might need more CPU). I was gaming on a i7 920 until 2019. While there were some slowdowns in some games, I still managed to play a lot of them. Given you have a 6750 XT that you're happy with, I'd say just get a new system when you next decide to upgrade your GPU.

[–] Atemu@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

The former is trivial for almost any CPU (and your GPU is probably massive overkill) but web dev should require quite a lot of resources actually. If you're fine with the speed I guess that works too though (I mean, JS is never going to be particularly fast is it..).