Cpu or Gpu upgrade?Bottleneck?

joacocasla99

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Sep 3, 2017
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Hi everyone, I'm thinking of upgrading my computer cause its getting really old, actually I have:
fx 8320
8gb ram ddr3
r9270x

i was thinking of upgrading gpu first becasuse upgrading cpu means changing mother and ram too and it will be more money than just gpu and i use it for gaming so i don't know if its going to be a big performance imporvemnte in comparison to a gpu upgrade

I was thinking of buying a 1060(400 dollars in my country) or a 580(440 dollars) but i don't know if i will have bottleneck so want your opinion of whats the best thing to do

PS: sorry for my English I'm not native speaker and thank you for reading and commenting
 
Solution
Some games are graphics limited like fast action shooters.
Others are cpu core speed limited like strategy, sims, and mmo.
Multiplayer with many participants tend to like many threads.

You need to find out which.
------------------------------------------------------------
To help clarify your CPU/GPU options, run these two tests:

a) Run YOUR games, but lower your resolution and eye candy.
If your FPS increases, it indicates that your cpu is strong enough to drive a better graphics configuration.
If your FPS stays the same, you are likely more cpu limited.

b) Limit your cpu, either by reducing the OC, or, in windows power management, limit the maximum cpu% to something like 70%.
Go to control panel/power options/change plan...
If your upgrading your GPU then that CPU will bottleneck you. If you are upgrading CPU, RAM and Mobo then that GPU will bottleneck you. You would be better of holding your money for a while until you can upgrade everything. With that said, you would probably still see a little performance boost upgrading your GPU, So start with your GPU as you can move that over when you have money to upgrade the rest.
 
Some games are graphics limited like fast action shooters.
Others are cpu core speed limited like strategy, sims, and mmo.
Multiplayer with many participants tend to like many threads.

You need to find out which.
------------------------------------------------------------
To help clarify your CPU/GPU options, run these two tests:

a) Run YOUR games, but lower your resolution and eye candy.
If your FPS increases, it indicates that your cpu is strong enough to drive a better graphics configuration.
If your FPS stays the same, you are likely more cpu limited.

b) Limit your cpu, either by reducing the OC, or, in windows power management, limit the maximum cpu% to something like 70%.
Go to control panel/power options/change plan settings/change advanced power settings/processor power management/maximum processor state/
This will simulate what a lack of cpu power will do.
Conversely what a 30% improvement in core speed might do.

You should also experiment with removing one or more cores/threads. You can do this in the windows msconfig boot advanced options option.
You will need to reboot for the change to take effect. Set the number of threads to less than you have.
This will tell you how sensitive your games are to the benefits of many threads.
If you see little difference, your game does not need all the threads you have.



It is possible that both tests are positive, indicating that you have a well balanced system,
and both cpu and gpu need to be upgraded to get better gaming FPS.
-------------------------------------------------------------

It is reasonable to upgrade a graphics card first; it can easily be moved later to a new cpu/mobo/ram build.
A good upgrade if you favor fast action games.
GTX1060 is a nice upgrade. Be aware that the 6gb version is stronger than the 3gb version. Not juist because of the 3gb higher vram, but it has more cuda cores also.

If you decide on a cpu upgrade go with modern kaby lake or ryzen.
Favor ryzen if you play multiplayer where many threads help.
I think Intel if you are single thread limited, and most games are.
 
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