The Intel Core i9-9980XE CPU Review: Refresh Until it Hertz
by Ian Cutress on November 13, 2018 9:00 AM ESTGaming: Shadow of the Tomb Raider (DX12)
The latest instalment of the Tomb Raider franchise does less rising and lurks more in the shadows with Shadow of the Tomb Raider. As expected this action-adventure follows Lara Croft which is the main protagonist of the franchise as she muscles through the Mesoamerican and South American regions looking to stop a Mayan apocalyptic she herself unleashed. Shadow of the Tomb Raider is the direct sequel to the previous Rise of the Tomb Raider and was developed by Eidos Montreal and Crystal Dynamics and was published by Square Enix which hit shelves across multiple platforms in September 2018. This title effectively closes the Lara Croft Origins story and has received critical acclaims upon its release.
The integrated Shadow of the Tomb Raider benchmark is similar to that of the previous game Rise of the Tomb Raider, which we have used in our previous benchmarking suite. The newer Shadow of the Tomb Raider uses DirectX 11 and 12, with this particular title being touted as having one of the best implementations of DirectX 12 of any game released so far.
AnandTech CPU Gaming 2019 Game List | ||||||||
Game | Genre | Release Date | API | IGP | Low | Med | High | |
Shadow of the Tomb Raider | Action | Sep 2018 |
DX12 | 720p Low |
1080p Medium |
1440p High |
4K Highest |
All of our benchmark results can also be found in our benchmark engine, Bench.
Game | IGP | Low | Medium | High |
Average FPS | ||||
95th Percentile |
143 Comments
View All Comments
nexuspie - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Marketing doesn't work in tech. Tech buyers aren't dumb. People want performance, and today that's Intel by far. On a per-core basis it creams the competitor.Arbie - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Ironically stated in pure marketing-speak.Tech buyers know that shouting "performance" is meaningless out of context - and that includes a lot more than clock speed. For example price, power, cooling, cores, threading, features, platform, socket life... the list goes on. All conveniently ignored in a slogan like yours, which could have come from an Intel ad.
Spunjji - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
He's dropping classic lines from the "I am an empowered, smart individual and marketing doesn't work on me" playbook. I find it's usually a line trotted out by people on whom marketing works absolute miracles.Kilnk - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
I've been reading your comments and I love your style.Arbie - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
"there’s no point advertising a magical 28-core 5 GHz CPU ... if only one in a million hits that value."Sure there is: to confuse the market and draw attention away from the competition. As at Computex in June.
twtech - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link
How about 4.5 GHz?eva02langley - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
So many refreshes, and so little supply on the shelves.jospoortvliet - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link
Takes only 9 weeks to be delivered I suppose? And that is just the promise - delays likely.Cooe - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Rofl, and the second you look at the price tags, anyone with half a piece of common sense would realize that buying an i9-9980XE over a TR-2950X is absolutely freaking ridiculous! (Unless you simply NEED AVX-512 that is). Intel's flailing with Skylake.... again..., while AMD's near finished changing the game entirely with 7nm Zen 2, and it's all honestly pretty damn hilarious. Karma's a b**ch and all that lol.benedict - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Agreed, the 2950X offers the best value in the HEDT segment.