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What about this other CPU that’s not on the list? How do I know if it’s a good deal or not?

This will happen. In fact, it’s guaranteed to happen because availability and prices change quickly. So how do you know if that CPU you’ve got your eye on is a good buy in its price range?

Here is a resource to help you judge if a CPU is a good buy or not: the gaming CPU hierarchy chart, which groups CPUs with similar overall gaming performance levels into tiers. The top tier contains the highest-performing gaming CPUs available and gaming performance decreases as you go down the tiers from there.

However, a word of caution: this hierarchy is based on the average performance each CPU achieved in our charts test suite using only four game titles: Crysis, Unreal Tournament 3, World in Conflict, and Supreme Commander. While we feel this represents an acceptable cross-section of typical gaming scenarios, a specific game title will likely perform differently. Some games, for example, will be severely graphics subsystem-limited, while others may react positively to more CPU cores, larger amounts of CPU cache, or even a specific architecture. We also did not have access to every CPU on the market, so some of the CPU performance estimates are based on the numbers similar architectures deliver. Indeed, this hierarchy chart is useful as a general guideline, but certainly not as a gospel one-size-fits-all perfect CPU comparison resource.

You can use this hierarchy to compare the pricing between two processors, to see which one is a better deal, and also to determine if an upgrade is worthwhile. I don’t recommend upgrading your CPU unless the potential replacement is at least three tiers higher. Otherwise, the upgrade is somewhat parallel and you may not notice a worthwhile difference in game performance.

Gaming CPU Hierarchy Chart
IntelAMD
Core i7 Extreme 965, 975
Core i7 860, 870, 920, 940, 950,
Core i5 750
Core 2 Extreme QX9775, QX9770, QX9650
Core 2 Quad Q9650

Core 2 Extreme QX6850, QX6800
Core 2 Quad Q9550, Q9450, Q9400
Core 2 Duo E8600, E8500
Phenom II X4 Black Edition 955, 965
Core 2 Extreme QX6700
Core 2 Quad Q6700, Q9300, Q8400, Q6600, Q8300
Core 2 Duo E8400, E8300, E8190, E8200, E7600, E7500, E6850
Phenom X4 945, 940, 920, 810
Phenom II X3 720 Black Edition
Athlon II X4 630
Athlon II X3 435
Core 2 Quad Q8200, E7400, E6750
Core 2 Extreme X6800
Phenom II X4 910, 805, 905e
Phenom II X3 710, 705e
Phenom II X2 545, 550 Black Edition
Phenom X4 9950
Athlon II X4 620
Athlon II X3 425
Core 2 Duo E7200, E6550, E7300, E6540, E6700
Pentium Dual-Core E6300, E6500
Phenom X4 9850, 9750, 9650, 9600
Phenom X3 8850, 8750
Athlon 64 X2 6400+
Core 2 Duo E4700, E4600, E6600, E4500, E6420
Pentium Dual-Core E5400, E5300, E5200
Phenom X4 9500, 9550, 9450e, 9350e
Phenom X3 8650, 8600, 8550, 8450e, 8450, 8400, 8250e
Athlon II X2 240, 245, 250
Athlon X2 7850, 7750
Athlon 64 X2 6000+, 5600+
Core 2 Duo E4400, E4300, E6400, E6320
Celeron E3300
Phenom X4 9150e, 9100e
Athlon X2 7550, 7450, 5050e, 4850e/b
Athlon 64 X2 5400+, 5200+, 5000+, 4800+
Core 2 Duo E6300
Pentium Dual-Core E2220, E2200, E2210
Celeron E3200
Athlon X2 6550, 6500, 4450e/b,
Athlon X2 4600+, 4400+, 4200+, BE-2400
Pentium Dual-Core E2180
Celeron E1600
Athlon 64 X2 4000+, 3800+
Athlon X2 4050e, BE-2300
Pentium Dual-Core E2160, E2140
Celeron E1500, E1400, E1200

Summary

There you have it folks: the best gaming CPUs for the money this month. Now all that’s left to do is to find and purchase them.

Also remember that the stores don’t follow this list. Things will change over the course of the month and you’ll probably have to adapt your buying strategy to deal with fluctuating prices. Good luck!

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silverblue 23/11/2009 21:21
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Good guide, though for some reason you've put the Athlons down as having 64KB of L1 cache (it should be 128KB - 64 instruction and 64 data).

Anonymous 28/11/2009 02:20
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There's another glaring error, on Athlon II the X2 has 1MiB L2,m the X3/X4 only 512KiB!

silverblue 28/11/2009 02:35
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I don't think that's an error; they were deliberately given 1MB L2 per core. The X3s and X4s rightfully have 512KB cache per core.

LePhuronn 28/11/2009 16:07
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Um surely as a gamer if I want to run Triple SLI then the i7 920 isn't "past the point of reason", it's a necessity?

Surely this is "best gaming CPUs for the money" not "best gaming CPUs on a budget"?

brutalspoon 30/11/2009 03:11
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LePhuronn :
Um surely as a gamer if I want to run Triple SLI then the i7 920 isn't "past the point of reason", it's a necessity?Surely this is "best gaming CPUs for the money" not "best gaming CPUs on a budget"?



... isn't that the name of the article?

Nice guide. Can't wait to get my i5 750!

LePhuronn 30/11/2009 12:10
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brutalspoon :
... isn't that the name of the article?



That's my point - if this was a review of gaming on a budget I'd understand saying anything above $150 isn't worth it, but it's not. This is supposed to be best gaming CPUs in a number of price brackets, and to claim the i7 920 is "above the point of reason" when it's actually a necessity when running triple GPU set-ups (which is gaming, isn't it?) is a bit short-sighted.

brutalspoon 30/11/2009 12:26
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LePhuronn :
That's my point - if this was a review of gaming on a budget I'd understand saying anything above $150 isn't worth it, but it's not. This is supposed to be best gaming CPUs in a number of price brackets, and to claim the i7 920 is "above the point of reason" when it's actually a necessity when running triple GPU set-ups (which is gaming, isn't it?) is a bit short-sighted.



Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure triple GPU set-ups aren't all that common compared to the overwhelming majority of people with single or dual GPU set ups.

Putting that aside, they do point out that if you're spending ridiculous amounts of money on graphics hardware and are worried about a platform bottleneck then they recommend the i7 9xx series. Otherwise, there's no real reason to buy anything more than an i5 because the price/performance ratio goes down the drain when you go much past that.

It makes even less sense when you take into account that you can (apparently relatively easily) overclock the i5 to match the i7 975 (if that's your sort of thing) for $800 less.

Anonymous 05/12/2009 06:51
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dude you can run triple sli on a msi board with a am3 socket learn your stuff before you open your mouth

brutalspoon 05/12/2009 16:31
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alex704 :
dude you can run triple sli on a msi board with a am3 socket learn your stuff before you open your mouth



Just because you can doesn't mean you do. And even if you DO use an AM3, this whole conversation about whether i7s are worth the money is completely pointless, isn't it? *shrugs*

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