Just a shiny new am4 and a... 2800 (probably) cpu away in my caseI am already sitting on a bunch of components - just a PSU, CPU and Mainboard away from a PC... I am holding out for Ryzen+ to see which way to jump.
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Just a shiny new am4 and a... 2800 (probably) cpu away in my caseI am already sitting on a bunch of components - just a PSU, CPU and Mainboard away from a PC... I am holding out for Ryzen+ to see which way to jump.
I think you may be wrong there, AMD have massively pushed APU's in the past and I will be really interested to see just how far ahead these are from the A6-A12 range. If you want a desktop with lite gaming capabilities in the living room for instance, those chips were really popular... it will be interesting to see if the same happens again - but this time they are on mainstream motherboards that are going to have support all the way to Ryzen 2 so you have a massive upgrade path...
I am already sitting on a bunch of components - just a PSU, CPU and Mainboard away from a PC... I am holding out for Ryzen+ to see which way to jump.
I played DoS2 for a couple of nights whilst away for work using my 2011 laptop. It has a separate GPU (NVS 5200M) but it's barely better than the IGP (HD4000), maybe 10-20% faster at best. With the latest drivers and with all graphics settings at a minimum, I was getting 17 FPS on the main menu. Dropping from 1080p to 1366x768 increased this to 30 FPS. In-game it was sort-of playable, maybe 20 FPS on average, but there were some battles that literally crawled at 1 FPS or lower. So basically I understand how crap IGPs are.
This is what the A12 9800 can do and I suspect the CPU section is not helping that much either due its relative slowness. So the Ryzen 3 2200G with a faster CPU section and faster IGP should be able to run Overwatch at 1080p at OKish framerates,and this will be a sub £100 CPU. I think that is pretty impressive for the money!!
Also,I have a feeling AMD might not want to crash sales of cards like the RX550,since adding some high speed RAM for the IGP would essentially make their lower end graphics cards a tad pointless for AMD systems.
I played DoS2 for a couple of nights whilst away for work using my 2011 laptop. It has a separate GPU (NVS 5200M) but it's barely better than the IGP (HD4000), maybe 10-20% faster at best. With the latest drivers and with all graphics settings at a minimum, I was getting 17 FPS on the main menu. Dropping from 1080p to 1366x768 increased this to 30 FPS. In-game it was sort-of playable, maybe 20 FPS on average, but there were some battles that literally crawled at 1 FPS or lower. So basically I understand how crap IGPs are.
On the surface, being able to play Overwatch at 1080p sounds great but that presumably also means with minimum graphics settings, and it's actually a well optimised game, so I'm not sure how impressive that is. I'd be interested to see DoS2 benchmarks for the R5 2400G to see how a state-of-the-art IGP compares with a 7 year old IGP-esque card. I'd hope it's far better but who knows.
Remember though the two divisions CPUs and Graphics are essentially two different companies and are focused solely on improving profit. If selling low-end GPU cores to the CPU division (or indeed to Intel), makes more money than selling them to board partners for discrete cards - why wouldn't you?
With Intel now buying AMD GPUs for use on-package in some of their CPUs, the market share for lower end AMD GPUs is disappearing anyway.
@CAT-THE-FIFTH
Meh, the 15 Watt Ryzen 2500U already does pretty well at gaming, better than you'd think.
The 2500G is a faster part, i think the RX 550 is already in deep water and we have the 2700G to come yet.
I know that! Look at
But I was trying to highlight how poor even the latest Intel sub £200 CPUs were when compared to the previous generation APUs! Now imagine a better IGP,better memory controller and a far better CPU than the old A12 9800. Being desktop parts these should have less issues boosting too.
The same channel tested dozens of games on the Ryzen 5 2500U:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdgMv_9A0z8&vl=en
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqGnYR_bNIg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9MYwQbR5bc&t=1s
Yeah, your right but isn't the point of APU's that they are cheap for very budget mind people when all they want in XBox One level gaming performance?
You stick HBM on them and suddenly they ain't $100 anymore, double that.
Up to a degree it is engineered to be a lower cost solution,but it does make me wonder if the Ryzen 5 2400G had a version with a stack of the cheapest HBM2,how it would be compare graphics performance wise with something like an RX460,and what would be cheaper to make overall. Who knows we might see something like this in the future at the lower end of the market.
The R3 2200G has the same IGP as the R5 2500U, except that the former might be able to boost for longer with its higher TDP. The R5 2400G indeed has a better IGP though and may well be decently faster.@CAT-THE-FIFTH
Meh, the 15 Watt Ryzen 2500U already does pretty well at gaming, better than you'd think.
The 2500G is a faster part, i think the RX 550 is already in deep water and we have the 2700G to come yet.
I still think the bump to supporting 2933 MHz DDR4 as standard is the most interesting news here, given some people were struggling to reach even that with Summit Ridge chips.
A minor advantage of Summit/Pinnacle Ridge having no IGP.If they do an APU + HBM2, miners will buy them all and push the price up. It might happen anyway, depends how they perform.
If they do an APU + HBM2, miners will buy them all and push the price up. It might happen anyway, depends how they perform.
To put this in perspective:I think the upcoming AMD APUs will be the go to option for a lot of people for a first gaming pc (budget side of a build) 30-40fps for lots of games at 1080p is quite brilliant really. AMD may suck with discreet graphics cards but their CPU and APU side is really good for the money.
It's worth remembering how much of a difference a competitive AMD makes to the CPU market!