My friend asked me to help him upgrade his computer and I found the AMD fx8350 and intel i5 3570k to be the best cpu's for him, but here is my question.
at the moment, the i5 is better (slightly) then the fx8350, but what about the future? especially considering the ps4 and xbox one will be running an 8 core AMD cpu, will games be optimized for an 8 core cpu in the future? (as well as being optimized for an AMD rig?) or should I recommend the i5, as in most games it performs better.
For now, the i5-3570K and the FX-8350 are tied for most games. A few select titles like Crysis 3 do give the octo-core some advantage, but otherwise they're equal. I'd expect this to continue into 2014, although once games are properly optimised, towards the middle of that year we'll see AMD with performance parity compared to Ivy Bridge/Haswell and, eventually, a performance lead because more games will be integer-based, giving them a small window of opportunity.
you usually get longer life from your motherboard as well as AMD don't change socket with each generation chip change
Like you said earlier, AM3+ will probably be dead in late 2014/early 2015. I think they'll support the socket as far as Steamroller with a slightly updated chipset, but their entire future now is in APUs. That's where all the major developments will be.
I'm expecting an integration between the two markets to be announced at Computex next year. AMD may actually show us a roadmap with this planned at Computex next week.
Sorry for the jack but i wana upgrade my mobo and cpu (still on Core2Quad) and one of my buddies swears heart n soul by AMD and his setup does run very sweet, should i be looking at the FM motherboards?
Dont think i'll be able to afford the latest AMD goodies when it arrives lol! But looking at their Hexa and Octacore chips...?
Right now FM2 boards are sweet. I'd wait a month to see if AMD's new Richland processor hits our shores at the expected pricing. A few months on from that we'll see another update to the FM2 platform with Kaveri, the first chip with Steamroller cores.
If you're not going to use the integrated graphics, though, I'd pick up an AM3+ board around the R800 - R1100 price range and complement that with the FX-6350. Its the best bang for buck and includes plenty of overclocking headroom with the right cooler.
Also, check out Haswell processors and boards which will also be launching this month. You may like what you see there as well.
No not sure that amd will max out anything.
You may want to read this:
FX Vs. Core i7: Exploring CPU Bottlenecks And AMD CrossFire
AMD certainly does maximise that Crossfire pair nicely. On average, AMD gives you 90% of the performance of a comparable Core i5 or i7 processor in games today at around 80% of the price. On price alone I'd much rather go with the FX-8350 over a Core i7-3770K, the R1000 markup isn't worth it for me.
well thats the thing, with games being designed for xbox one and ps4, they would utilize 8 cores, but when they are ported over to pc's, will it still use all 8 cores?
Hmm are you sure there are enough 8 core PC CPU's being used out there for them to optimize PC port for 8 cores? Almost all gamers out there on PC have 4 or less cores based on Steam's stats. Until that changes I'm not so sure 8 cores on PC is gonna help very much. In fact when they port they could purposefully only utilize 4 cores because that is what 90% of the people playing the game will have.
To answer both your questions: No. Games won't immediately use all eight cores. But as was the case with the Xbox 360, which was the mule for PC ports and had a triple-core Power PC processor, most games would run just fine on a dual-core or, as I used to recommend for budget gamers, a triple-core processor. Some games that are made on the PC and than ported back down, like Crysis 3, Skyrim and Far Cry 3, are more CPU-dependent and perform at their best using four or more cores.
I expect in the immediate future that the best, and most well-utilised processor from AMD's stable, will be the FX-6350, if you're working on CPU performance alone. Below that will be the A10-6800K or whatever Kaveri variant that will be out later this year. Intel's quads will still perform pretty well but as I said before, AMD will only reach performance parity with Ivy Bridge/Haswell in the middle of next year and towards the end of 2014 they'll have a window of opportunity with a performance lead, which they can use to their advantage to launch a new processor family with higher performance than anything Intel will be offering then and simultaneously merge their sockets back together again.