I know people say that you can get great results from overclocking the Pentium G series but I can't help but feel scrimping on the CPU when building a system you're planning on overclocking is a bad idea.
If you're buying a £60 CPU and a £30-40 CPU cooler to overclock it then wouldn't it make more sense just to put the money into buying a faster CPU at that price point? Certainly from most of the benchmarks I've seen a stock I3 for £100-ish would be better value than an overclocked Pentium G3258 plus the cost of the CPU cooler?
http://www.anandtech.com/show/8232/...y-edition-review-the-intel-pentium-g3258-ae/2
http://www.anandtech.com/show/8232/...y-edition-review-the-intel-pentium-g3258-ae/3
Doesn't seem to make any sense going for a Pentium/CPU cooler and overclocking when you could have a stock Core-i3 for the same money unless I'm missing something? Granted, in a handful of single threaded benchmarks the OC'd Pentium wins but in general the i3 seems superior and that's before you factor in that you could OC the i3 in future for further gains. Even in most of the gaming benchmarks there are quite a few (eg. Battlefield 4) where the Pentium holds back performance substantially compared to an i3.
Seems like a false economy buying this with the intention of overclocking it as far as I can tell?
If you're buying a £60 CPU and a £30-40 CPU cooler to overclock it then wouldn't it make more sense just to put the money into buying a faster CPU at that price point? Certainly from most of the benchmarks I've seen a stock I3 for £100-ish would be better value than an overclocked Pentium G3258 plus the cost of the CPU cooler?
http://www.anandtech.com/show/8232/...y-edition-review-the-intel-pentium-g3258-ae/2
http://www.anandtech.com/show/8232/...y-edition-review-the-intel-pentium-g3258-ae/3
Doesn't seem to make any sense going for a Pentium/CPU cooler and overclocking when you could have a stock Core-i3 for the same money unless I'm missing something? Granted, in a handful of single threaded benchmarks the OC'd Pentium wins but in general the i3 seems superior and that's before you factor in that you could OC the i3 in future for further gains. Even in most of the gaming benchmarks there are quite a few (eg. Battlefield 4) where the Pentium holds back performance substantially compared to an i3.
Seems like a false economy buying this with the intention of overclocking it as far as I can tell?
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