F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Question regarding the Valley Benchmark's usefulness

Question regarding the Valley Benchmark's usefulness

Question regarding the Valley Benchmark's usefulness

M
Monstertheo07
Junior Member
38
04-17-2016, 06:26 PM
#1
Hello, I recently conducted a performance evaluation on my system utilizing the extremeHD presents benchmark on Valley, achieving a score of 1515. This result is disappointing considering my hardware configuration and falls below average for similar setups. I would greatly appreciate any suggestions you might have. Furthermore, my central processing unit is overclocked to 4.3 GHz and occasionally reaches 4.5 GHz with turbo boost. My system specifications include a FX 8350 processor, an NVIDIA GTX 970 graphics card in an MSI ARMOR 4 GB enclosure, paired with an Asus 970 gaming motherboard. I have 16GB of RAM and a white EVGA 600-watt power supply. My cooling solution consists of an Antec 120mm CPU water cooler, housed within a Corsair 750D case.
M
Monstertheo07
04-17-2016, 06:26 PM #1

Hello, I recently conducted a performance evaluation on my system utilizing the extremeHD presents benchmark on Valley, achieving a score of 1515. This result is disappointing considering my hardware configuration and falls below average for similar setups. I would greatly appreciate any suggestions you might have. Furthermore, my central processing unit is overclocked to 4.3 GHz and occasionally reaches 4.5 GHz with turbo boost. My system specifications include a FX 8350 processor, an NVIDIA GTX 970 graphics card in an MSI ARMOR 4 GB enclosure, paired with an Asus 970 gaming motherboard. I have 16GB of RAM and a white EVGA 600-watt power supply. My cooling solution consists of an Antec 120mm CPU water cooler, housed within a Corsair 750D case.

S
Spooky325
Junior Member
36
04-18-2016, 04:53 AM
#2
The FX8350 is now obsolete and will not deliver satisfactory results in performance tests. It possesses a notably limited processing unit.
S
Spooky325
04-18-2016, 04:53 AM #2

The FX8350 is now obsolete and will not deliver satisfactory results in performance tests. It possesses a notably limited processing unit.

K
keanyko
Member
160
04-27-2016, 01:15 PM
#3
Absolutely, so you’re wondering if upgrading to an i5-4590 would be helpful? I'm holding off on constructing a completely new PC until the latest Ryzen processors are released, but I’m experiencing noticeable pauses in my games now and suspect it’s a problem with the processor.
K
keanyko
04-27-2016, 01:15 PM #3

Absolutely, so you’re wondering if upgrading to an i5-4590 would be helpful? I'm holding off on constructing a completely new PC until the latest Ryzen processors are released, but I’m experiencing noticeable pauses in my games now and suspect it’s a problem with the processor.

L
lilerence555
Junior Member
15
04-27-2016, 06:36 PM
#4
The Intel Core i5-4590 necessitates a complete system overhaul. This would likely involve a new motherboard, central processing unit, and potentially a fresh operating system license. However, is Valley capable of handling multiple threads? The older, less powerful FX-8350 performs noticeably better when running games that utilize numerous threads. Back in its time, games weren’t designed to efficiently use multiple processing cores like they are now. I maintain my FX-8350 and am somewhat taken aback by its continued effectiveness (assuming you have reasonable expectations).
L
lilerence555
04-27-2016, 06:36 PM #4

The Intel Core i5-4590 necessitates a complete system overhaul. This would likely involve a new motherboard, central processing unit, and potentially a fresh operating system license. However, is Valley capable of handling multiple threads? The older, less powerful FX-8350 performs noticeably better when running games that utilize numerous threads. Back in its time, games weren’t designed to efficiently use multiple processing cores like they are now. I maintain my FX-8350 and am somewhat taken aback by its continued effectiveness (assuming you have reasonable expectations).