Amd vs intel????

  • Thread starter TheSpiritedWarrior
  • Start date
TheSpiritedWarrior

TheSpiritedWarrior

Never gives up a fight
Towns Folk
Intel and amd war! Amd is used on the wii u, xb1, and ps4 and intel is pretty popular on laptops. My question is, whats better? Its really hard to decide, especially when I see both of them. As of now, I think Amd is better but what is better. Disadvantages and advantages?
 
Fist of all, you should clarify whether you are talking about just CPUs, GPUs or both. Assuming you mean GPUs, I'm an AMD guy, but here are the advantages and disadvantages of each brand:
For CPUs:
AMD

Advantages:
-Cheap (value for money)
-High frequencies (GHz)
-Multi-cores (4-8 average)
-Large L1/L2/L3 Caches
-Work extremely well with AMD GPUs, especially the APU families
-Driver support is instant! Bug fixes are addressed in less than an hour!
-Almost all AMD CPUs have unlocked clocks, meaning it's incredibly easy to overclock them!
-Overclock tolerance is insanely high! You can easily reach twice the initial frequency with proper cooling!
-Backwards socket-chipset compatibility! (eg: AM3+ sockets support AM3+ CPUs AND AM3 ones.)
-APUs only: They consume/drain far lower wattage, resulting in lower electric bills.

Disadvantages:
-In all not APU families, cores work collectively instead of independently, meaning it's like you have just one HUGELY powerful core, making heavy multitasking slower and may even hang under full load.
-In relation to the above point, core management is terrible and sometimes even random!
-Without proper cooling the temperature can shoot up a LOT!
-Mother coolers (those are the ones provided when you get the CPU) are really loud! Even at IDLE state!
-The 8-core FX series, meaning 8320-9990 don't include a cooling device/system and need extremely powerful cooling to keep them from overheating!
-Component support is greatly lagging behind compared to Intel. For example, AMD has yet to commercially release a CPU for use with he DDR4 rams, while Intel did it on their launch date back in January 5.

Intel
Advantages:
-Core management is the second best in processors there is! Meaning great multi-core support!
-Slightly higher performance than their AMD equivalents (just 4% though).
-Greater multi-system support (same core can serve in any kind of system
-Instant hardware support as soon as it's released! (example above^)
-Better quality heatpipes, so better heat circulation, meaning that they don't reach high temperatures that easily.

Disadvantages:
-Price! They cost almost THREE times as much as the AMD counterparts! (remember, just for 4% more performance!)
-Driver support takes FOREVER! AMD released a bug fix for processing errors in Batman Arkham Knight on the first day, while Intel has yet to even start working on one!
-WAY too many sockets! The same processor may come out for a different socket, without compatibility between the different versions and without an significant differences!
-When not using multi-core applications, the performance is at ~35% of that of AMD processors!
-Has way too many disadvantages to keep listing them!:p (Also, has less advantages than disadvantages)


There is no need to make a list about the GPUs, as AMD's are the best in performance-price ratio and second best in sheer performance, so I'm leaving it at that.

If you need any more information, just ask.
 
Desktop-wise, Intel is better (unless if you consider AMD's FX-8xxx series), but laptop-wise, I have a way better performance with AMD's APU than my friends have with their i3 and their GTX.

Oh, and just to let you know, most of my friends spent, just like me, around 400€ for their laptops, and they struggle to get as much FPS as I have on most games. Only another friend of mine with a 2nd generation i7 processor and a GTX-6xxM or 7xxM (don't remember) manages to run games like I do.

And to finish, I'd go with what @Tho has said: Intel's CPUs are way too expensive, compared to their AMD counterparts. Sure, they don't get as hot as fast as AMD CPUs, and have better multi-core support, but, seriously, paying over 379€ an i7 or very slightly lower for an i3/i5 (barely 50€ in most cases in France!) is just ridiculous.
 
Just as D4rkDragon mentioned, for low cost computers, AMD's APU offer great performance and are probably the best value-for-money option there is. Unless you are willing to spend 1000€ or more on a computer, it's much more preferable to go with an AMD build. I'm a desktop guy and I have three computers for example, all of which are AMD builds. One with FX 6350, one with FX 8350 and one with FX 9590 and all of them can run everything I've tried without any problems. Even the FX 6350 one can run Watch Dogs at Ultra without any FPS drops! Also, even for the FX 9590 one, I only ended up paying about 820€, which is really cheap considering the performance I get.
 
  • Like
Reactions: D4rkDragon
Back
Top