F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming No, a 2400G will not bottleneck a 1070Ti.

No, a 2400G will not bottleneck a 1070Ti.

No, a 2400G will not bottleneck a 1070Ti.

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ChristobalMC_
Member
102
12-13-2017, 02:23 PM
#1
I’m evaluating a Ryzen 5 2400G paired with a GTX 1070 Ti for freeframe support with an NVIDIA GPU, using the XF250Q at 240Hz. At close viewing distance and with detailed textures, I expect around 60–70 FPS, which should be smooth but not perfect. Lowering settings or using anti-aliasing might help maintain stability.
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ChristobalMC_
12-13-2017, 02:23 PM #1

I’m evaluating a Ryzen 5 2400G paired with a GTX 1070 Ti for freeframe support with an NVIDIA GPU, using the XF250Q at 240Hz. At close viewing distance and with detailed textures, I expect around 60–70 FPS, which should be smooth but not perfect. Lowering settings or using anti-aliasing might help maintain stability.

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Stupsi_dupsi
Member
63
12-16-2017, 02:26 AM
#2
It would be significantly below 240Hz, yet I’d still choose it.
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Stupsi_dupsi
12-16-2017, 02:26 AM #2

It would be significantly below 240Hz, yet I’d still choose it.

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Zacman13901
Member
55
12-16-2017, 08:50 AM
#3
The bottleneck would be extremely pronounced, yet if you believe the cost savings from Freesync are justified, I recommend checking 2400f frame rates for each game.
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Zacman13901
12-16-2017, 08:50 AM #3

The bottleneck would be extremely pronounced, yet if you believe the cost savings from Freesync are justified, I recommend checking 2400f frame rates for each game.

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vikkiii
Member
182
12-21-2017, 03:50 AM
#4
It's really frustrating seeing Nvidia address the issue post-purchase. For 4K60 it's fine, but at 240Hz it's not. Consider upgrading to something like 8600k or 8700k for better performance.
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vikkiii
12-21-2017, 03:50 AM #4

It's really frustrating seeing Nvidia address the issue post-purchase. For 4K60 it's fine, but at 240Hz it's not. Consider upgrading to something like 8600k or 8700k for better performance.

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Zeenor_
Junior Member
33
12-21-2017, 06:29 AM
#5
Many are proposing switching to Intel because it would necessitate a completely different motherboard. The 2200g offers solid performance, but it may limit the 1070ti significantly. It can still deliver decent results, yet you won’t get the maximum speed from either the CPU or the monitor. It’s not ideal unless you intend to upgrade your processor soon. I’d recommend sticking with it but consider moving to a Ryzen 5 or 7 as soon as possible.
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Zeenor_
12-21-2017, 06:29 AM #5

Many are proposing switching to Intel because it would necessitate a completely different motherboard. The 2200g offers solid performance, but it may limit the 1070ti significantly. It can still deliver decent results, yet you won’t get the maximum speed from either the CPU or the monitor. It’s not ideal unless you intend to upgrade your processor soon. I’d recommend sticking with it but consider moving to a Ryzen 5 or 7 as soon as possible.