Windows 7 Gaming Performance

Our Bench suite is getting a little long in the tooth, so I added a few more gaming tests under Windows 7 with a new group of processors. We'll be adding some of these tests to Bench in the future but the number of datapoints is obviously going to be small as we build up the results.

Batman is an Unreal Engine 3 game and a fairly well received one at that. Performance is measured using the built in benchmark at the highest image quality settings without AA enabled.

Batman: Arkham Asylum

Dragon Age Origins is another very well received game. The 3rd person RPG gives our CPUs a different sort of workload to enjoy:

Dragon Age Origins

Dawn of War II

World of Warcraft needs no introduction. An absurd number of people play it, so we're here to benchmark it. Our test favors repeatability over real world frame rates, so our results here will be higher than in the real world with lots of server load. But what our results will tell you is what the best CPU is to get for playing WoW:

World of Warcraft

Gaming Performance Power Consumption
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  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    That depends on the board I believe. Intel's DX58SO may not post without the BIOS update.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • Jammrock - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    One small title error. Intel's Xeon X7000-series CPUs are the first hex-core processors from Intel. Those are server only, but they are out there.

    http://ark.intel.com/Product.aspx?id=36947&cod...">http://ark.intel.com/Product.aspx?id=36...16M+Cach...

    Gulftown is the first desktop hex-core though.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    Corrected :)

    Take care,
    Anand
  • artifex - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    3x cores and threads for less than 2x the TDP of their dual cores? sexy!
  • Isaac the k - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    I must say, I do find this rather exciting.
    But since I'm running a poorly threaded data-simulation app with extremely high throughput, I'm debating whether the extra latency vs. the larger shared cache could potentially harm performance.

    If it wouldn't, I might actually request one for what my office is doing right now...
  • mikeblas - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    Aren't the Xeon E7450, Xeon L7455, and Xeon X7460 all six-core Intel processors that were released before this processor?
  • semo - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    If I understand this right Nahalem is the name of the micro architecture and not any CPU in particular. On page 2, the first die shot is captioned Nehalem. Shouldn't it be Bloomfield?

    BTW Anand, you are doing a good job demystifying desktop products but the mobile space is even worse

    arandale http://ark.intel.com/ProductCollection.aspx?codeNa...">http://ark.intel.com/ProductCollection.aspx?codeNa... vs clarkdale http://ark.intel.com/ProductCollection.aspx?codeNa...">http://ark.intel.com/ProductCollection.aspx?codeNa...

    vPro is even more confusing. E.g. AMT KVM is supposed to work on AMT 6.0 + on chip GPU yet the i3 don't apply... or the i5-661 http://communities.intel.com/community/openportit/...">http://communities.intel.com/community/...ote-cont...

    it would be useful if we could get some articles on mobile chips and/or vPro
  • iwodo - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    Waiting for Sandy Bridge- which will hopefully be the true successor of Core 2 Duo.
    PCI - Express 3.0, SATA 3.0, USB 3.0 ( Light Peak will be even better ), Bluetooth 4.0.
  • AnnonymousCoward - Saturday, March 13, 2010 - link

    Light Peak is kinda dumb...I think that's just multi-lane USB3/PCIe, and using light instead of wires is pointless since no one needs really long point-to-point cables. Apple just wants it since they're all about marketing new flashy things. USB3 could just as easily use as many lanes as you want, but it'd be unnecessarily expensive since 1 lane at 5Gbps is much faster than anything.
  • Pessimism - Thursday, March 11, 2010 - link

    This is not intel's first 6 core CPU. The 6 core Xeon 7400 was announced in 2008.

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