Performance evaluation under high CPU load for gaming scenarios
Performance evaluation under high CPU load for gaming scenarios
Do you have any specific stress tests in mind to check stable overclocks for gaming tasks? (Beyond just playing a game and waiting until it crashes.) I usually run Cinebench R23 with a 60-minute loop to test my CPU overclocks, and it consistently gives me full stability under gaming conditions. Since most of these tests are demanding and rely on AVX instructions, I think they’re more suited for general-purpose use than pure gaming workloads. I’m hoping you can suggest alternatives that focus only on gaming loads without using AVX. Please share your ideas below!
Prime95 is an extremely demanding stress test tool. If it doesn’t fail on Cinebench, you might consider using it. Note that Prime95 includes sound, so keep your volume low. Also, it can sometimes be overly challenging for the CPU, loading it much more intensely than any other application.
Read error in the script. Apologies for the misunderstanding. Unigine Heaven experiences a game load. I personally use it for performance tuning.
Sure, stability involves more than just running games without crashes. Cinebench provides a good approximation, but performing longer stress tests with heavier workloads can really confirm reliability. Since you don’t always play games alone, you might open Discord, switch to Chrome and Firefox with multiple overlays, start recording or streaming, and then watch a movie on your third monitor.
Individuals opt for more intense stress management methods because they deliver deeper results compared to typical games.
I rely on E-cores for all tasks except gaming. As mentioned before, I only use it for games so I avoid streaming or recording with x264; instead, I handle that with my GPU. I’m not interested in a benchmark that checks stability under heavy loads like Cinebench R23 with AVX. I need something that still puts stress on the CPU without that kind of intensive testing.
THE GAME GETS A BIG IMPROVEMENT, BUT IT’LL STILL BE DIFFERENT. "It crashes Cinbench23, but I can play because my game mostly runs on one core." After getting your system ready and steady, do you think the extra speed will really make a difference in how you play? Use your time or money to upgrade or stick with the version that works best for you. I’m not saying optimization doesn’t matter, just that it rarely fixes problems once they’re there!