Krazy
Town drunk
Except if you are lacking in game performance while...streaming a game, that has a pretty big impact on practical performance difference while streaming. In every game, even a 2500k still beats out the newest AMD chips, with still plenty of horsepower left over for streaming. Not to mention how much power draw you're looking at from the AMD chips vs Sandy/Ivy Bridge.Bensam123 said:If it's AM3+ it'll work with the processor. It may require a bios update though.
I would recommend buying a 8320 or a 8350 instead. Those are based on Piledriver instead of Bulldozer, which is a pretty hefty improvement. If you do buy either a 8150 or 8350 make sure you disable core parking and get the scheduler patch from MS, that fixes any issues with the processor.
You don't need Intel to stream. You can overclock a 8350 as well as a 8150. Paying a extra $100-150 for a motherboard in addition to the processor isn't worth it (something Intel users have no choice in paying for). A 8350 runs with very close to the same performance as a 3570k, let alone a 2500k. Almost no one in this thread is considering having to take a extra $100 onto a purchase to get similar performance to a 3570k.
8350 = $200
Board + 3570k = $320
There IS NOT a $120 performance difference between a 3570k and a 8350. Muf is correct. A high end i7 will completely blow a 8350 out of the water. A hexa core i7 costing at least $550. A 3770k isn't even worth buying nor are any of the other i7s till you reach hexacore. A hexacore i7 isn't 2.5x faster then a 8350 either.
The 8150/8350 sucks at single threaded performance, but even that suckiness has limitations (which a lot of people don't put properly into context). The 8350 is just as fast as a 3770k (a $320 processor) in many multi-threaded cases. Unfortunately I haven't seen good hardware review websites that have a couple benchmarks focused on streaming scenarios. Streaming is a very multithreaded workload. Encoding, running your game, running your streaming software, running any other bells and whistles in the background, a web browser, a h264 video (twitch), a web chat, VAC, all while alt tabbing constantly or having it all operating on different monitors.
Too much emphasis is put purely on game benchmarks and single threaded performance.
Yes, current AMD chips are "good enough" for streaming games and such, but they are not the most optimal/efficient.
BTW, running several programs at once isn't being "multithreaded" though obviously x264 encoding is. It's just running a bunch of, most times, single threaded programs at once. Something which the Intel chips are much better at.
Anyway, I think this thread has already gone past its usefulness, no need to continue an Intel vs AMD debate here.