Gaming: F1 2018

Aside from keeping up-to-date on the Formula One world, F1 2017 added HDR support, which F1 2018 has maintained; otherwise, we should see any newer versions of Codemasters' EGO engine find its way into F1. Graphically demanding in its own right, F1 2018 keeps a useful racing-type graphics workload in our benchmarks.

We use the in-game benchmark, set to run on the Montreal track in the wet, driving as Lewis Hamilton from last place on the grid. Data is taken over a one-lap race.

All of our benchmark results can also be found in our benchmark engine, Bench.

AnandTech IGP Low Medium High
Average FPS
95th Percentile

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  • plonk420 - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    it may be small, but they're now fighting Intel in that same small market with these Threadrippers, and, well AMD has the winning product in use cases i'm looking at (simultaneous video encoding streams and Blender, with enough cores to do that while gaming).

    AV1 is currently so slow to encode, i have to split a movie into 8 parts (probably more with one of these Zen2 TRs to get it done quicker) for a doable encode. took about 41-48 hours per part save for the credits to encode at 720p on a 16c32t 1950X
  • DavyJones - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    AMD curbstomps Intel at every price point, from $50 all the way to $7000+. How much lower should AMD price their CPU's exactly? Should they give them away for free?
    And yes, Intel has a vastly larger marketshare. They were on top for well over a decade, & for a large portion of that, AMD was completely irrelevant. Their server marketshare was statistically insignificant just 3 years ago & now they're knocking on the door of 10%. Their stock has skyrocketed in that time. Again... How cheap should AMD go when they have an objectively superior product?
  • jabber - Tuesday, November 26, 2019 - link

    Indeed at the end of the day Dell and HP etc. are taking all the i3/i5 chips the Corporate market can buy.

    Intel are probably still outselling AMD 10 to 1?
  • maxxbot - Tuesday, November 26, 2019 - link

    I would absolutely bet that more of these TR3 are going to be sold to professionals than consumers, I waited in line for the 3950X yesterday and even for that part half of the people in line were buying it for work.
  • Teckk - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    In this segment could be, but in laptops Intel is what is selling. AMD needs Zen2 + 7nm there
  • TEAMSWITCHER - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    That's my issue... I can't find any of these Threadripper, Ryzen 3950X, or Cascade Lake X in stock anywhere. But I can order 16" MacBook Pro right now and have it here tomorrow. Desktop CPU's are OLD SCHOOL. I would rather have a mobile solution that I can take .. anywhere.
  • Korguz - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    must be just where you are.. i can go to one store and buy the Threadripper 3960X now, but the 3970x is special order, for the intel 10xx series, not showing anything for these, yet
  • imaheadcase - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    Did Csutcliff not even look at benchmarks or even look at price difference for a setup?
  • tygrus - Tuesday, November 26, 2019 - link

    News of Intel's death have been greatly exaggerated. It would take more than 20 years of bad performance (<20% market share) for Intel to burn it's cash reserves.
  • Oliseo - Tuesday, November 26, 2019 - link

    I've seen bigger companies fail faster.

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