AMD Ryzen CPUs will launch by March 3

Well, I'm glad AMD made a comeback if these benches are true, this makes it better for cpu competition and deciding on upgrading in the future.
 
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Does anyone know why these new x370 boards only seem to support a max of 64G ram? 4 DDR slots instead of 8 on the intel boards (which support 128Gb)?

64 is enough for now, but in the future when I increase the VM workload on my machine I'll need more RAM...
 
Does anyone know why these new x370 boards only seem to support a max of 64G ram? 4 DDR slots instead of 8 on the intel boards (which support 128Gb)?

64 is enough for now, but in the future when I increase the VM workload on my machine I'll need more RAM...
Well 8 DIMMs would be for quad-channel, AFAIK. R7 only support dual-channel.
 
Does anyone know why these new x370 boards only seem to support a max of 64G ram? 4 DDR slots instead of 8 on the intel boards (which support 128Gb)?

64 is enough for now, but in the future when I increase the VM workload on my machine I'll need more RAM...
IIRC, Ryzen only supports dual channel RAM, so it's limited in terms of RAM.
I've been looking at this kit, but not sure about RAM... Should I go for higher frequency?
Also not sure about motherboard, the choices they have are the MSI and the ASUS but not sure which brand to go for.

Any got recommendation for brand/frequence and latency to go for?
Your RAM should be at least 2666 MHz, 1.2v, and the lowest latency you can get. The Ripjaws V line of DDR4 is pretty good, but it gets pricey above 2666Mhz due to the RAM shortage.

Also, that kit has a shit cooler. Get a Cryorig H7, at the very least.
 
Wow, big things in the CPU game about to go down, cant wait to get my hands on this Ryzen 7 1800X. Whats tantalising is that they named this top of the range Ryzen CPU with a 7 prefix, which tells you a 9 series is in the pipeline.
 
I cannot wait to see the performance of that "TOTALLY NORMAL GPU".

It was a good video, those dubbed parts were telling.

I think it was a touch mean to interrupt Linus in mid flow recording a segment, but he took it well and I note that Linus included the moment on his channel, so whatevs.

AMD is showing some real promise under Lisa Su, she is doing a great job.
 
Well you can always preorder to be safe, they won't charge you until it actually ships and you can cancel anytime.
Are real-world performance stats coming before launch?
I would be more worried about DDR4 prices
Many will probably upgrade from DDR3 platforms
Yeah I'm probably gonna go ahead and buy some RAM. Crazy how far prices have risen in just the last year

edit: wait, dumb question but i'm guessing any ddr4 ram will work with Ryzen?
 
Cross posting from the other Ryzen thread, but the AAA game market has already moved on past 4 threads:
Some AAA games benefit from having more than 4 cores, not all of them.
There are many more which are still very reliant on per-core performance: http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=230046573&postcount=240
Nearly anything older than a year or so does not scale well above four cores at all.

Looking ahead, having more than four cores is certainly the way things are going.
I'm definitely going to want 6-8 cores a year or two from now, and some of the applications/games I use today would benefit from it.

The question is whether it's worth buying an 8-core CPU now and potentially sacrificing performance in many games, or going with a fast hyperthreaded quad-core and waiting a year or two for it to become the majority of games which start to take advantage of more than four cores.
Based on the Cinebench scores, the 1800X at 4.1GHz (162cb) would still be about 10% faster per-core than my current 2500K at 4.5GHz (148cb). But a 7700K at 5GHz is about 45% faster per-core. (215cb)
That's not insignificant when only some games/applications can make use of >4 cores - especially when you factor in Ryzen's half-rate AVX2 performance, since many of the applications using >4 cores also benefit from AVX.

That's why we need benchmarks from sites like DigitalFoundry/GameGPU/Techspot and others that know how to set up a proper CPU test for games.
I certainly hope Ryzen does well, because who doesn't want to be paying half as much for the same level of performance?
But having all that multithreaded performance doesn't mean anything if the software you run can't take advantage of it.

Unfortunately the main games I actually care about CPU performance in right now are HITMAN and Dishonored 2, and I don't see them showing up on many benchmarks these days.
I just want to know what I have to buy to run those games smoothly.
 
Unfortunately the main games I actually care about CPU performance in right now are HITMAN and Dishonored 2, and I don't see them showing up on many benchmarks these days.
I just want to know what I have to buy to run those games smoothly.

No amount of CPU power in the world is going to help you with Dishonored 2, unfortunately. Engine is still busted on PC.
 
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