Conclusion
Having a closer look at the results we gathered
while testing eight different
games and two different benchmarks with two different presets, we see that the
Intel Core i7-4960X, with our "low-preset" is on average 15 percent faster than the
Core i7-3960X. Switching to our "high-preset" makes the Intel Core
i7-4960X
become 12 percent quicker than the Core i7-3960X. Overclocking the Intel Core
i7-4960X to 4.5 GHz makes the performance with our "low-preset" go up by
34 percent
and when it comes to the high-preset
the increase in performance is 30 percent. Regarding the Core i7-3960X the
situation is a little bit different: 24 percent gain with "low-preset" and
18 percent
with "high-preset". Other than that a quick look at power consumption
is also interesting. In this case we see that overclocking the Core
i7-4960X to 4.5 GHz makes power consumption of our system go up by 12 percent. With the
Core i7-3960X we see there is an additional 16
percent needed.
In the past we've been testing the same system equipped with one as well as two high-end
single GPU graphics cards. Especially with one GPU and in case of our high-preset the graphics
card is then going to be the limiting factor, meaning changing the CPU or even
overclocking processors doesn't make for a decent performance difference. As
soon as we're adding a second or even a third high-end graphics card, the bottleneck regarding
graphics cards is open and overclocking CPU architecture as well as CPU clocks
will make a difference even with the high preset.
Should you be thinking about buying a Core i7-4960X processor for your gaming
PC, in which you have three high-end graphics cards running in SLI, then the
performance gain, when upgrading from a Core i7-3960X to a Core i7-4960X is
going to be about 12 percent on average. Keeping in mind this CPU costs about
870 Euro we should be asking ourselves if this is really worth the
additional money. If you put in perspective what difference a new graphics card
can make regarding frames per second, then the answer is simply: no. But should
you be one of the power users who always demands the best possible components,
then the Core i7-4960X certainly is an upgrade.