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
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at8750 - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Hi, Ian.Did Intel officially announce Skylake-X Refresh be manufactured on 14++ node?
But 9980XE Stepping is the same as 7980XE.
Stepping is 4, there is no change.
SanX - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Sometimes the advantage of these processors with AVX512 versus usual desktop processors with AVX2 is crazy. The 3D particle tests fly like 500 mph cars. Which other tasks besides 3D particle movement also benefit from AVX512?How about linear algebra? Does Intel MKL which seems now support these extensions demonstrate similar speedups with AVX512 on solutions Ax=B, say, with the usual dense matrices?
TitovVN1974 - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link
Pray look up linpack results.SonicAndSmoke - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
@Ian: What's with that paragraph about the Mesh clocks on page 1? Mesh clock is 2.4 GHz stock on SKX, and there is no mesh turbo at all. You can check for yourself with AIDA64 or HwInfo. So does SKX-R have the same 2.4 GHz clock, or higher?Tamerlin - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Thorough review as always.I'd like to request that you consider adding some DaVinci Resolve tests to your suite, as it would be helpful for professional film post production professionals. There is a free license which has enough capability for professional work, and there is free raw footage available from Black Magic's web site and 8K raw footage available from Red's.
Thanks :)
askmedov - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Intel is playing with fire by doing incremental upgrades over and over again. Look no further than Apple's new iPads - their chips are better than what Intel has to offer in terms of price-power-efficiency. Apple is going to ditch Intel's processors very soon for most of its Mac lineup.bji - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Microsoft Windows is known to suck hard when it comes to performance on NUMA architectures and particularly the TR2 processors. See Phoronix for analysis.Why does Anandtech continue to post Windows-only benchmarks? They are fairly useless; they tell more about the limitations of Microsoft Windows than they do the processors themselves.
Of course, if you're a poor sap stuck running Windows for any task that requires these processors, I guess you care, but you really should be pushing your operating system vendor to use some of their billions of dollars to hire OS developers who know what they are doing.
I just bought a TR2 1950X for my software development workstation (Linux based) and I am fairly confident that for my work loads, it will kick the crap out of these Intel processors. I wouldn't know for sure though because I tend to read Anandtech fairly exclusively for hardware reports, dipping into sites like Phoronix only when necessary to get accurate details for edge cases like the TR2.
It sure would be nice if my site of choice (Anandtech) would start posting relevant results from operating systems designed to take advantage of these high power processors instead of more Windows garbage ... especially Windows gaming benchmarks, as if those are even remotely relevant to this CPU segment!
bji - Tuesday, November 13, 2018 - link
Erp I meant 2950X, sorry typo there.Shaky156 - Wednesday, November 14, 2018 - link
I have to agree 110%, gaming benchmarks are more gpu/ipc related more than a multicore cpu benchmark.Somehow seems anandtech could be biased
eva02langley - Wednesday, November 14, 2018 - link
Totally agree, we have come to a time that benchmarks are not even accurately evaluating the product anymore. The big question is how can we depict an accurate picture? Especially if the reviewer is not choosing the right ones properly for real comparison.Well, seeing disparity from Phoronix is raising major concern to me.