Gaming and Synthetics on Processor Graphics

The Haswell Pentium and Celeron ranges are filled with GT1 solutions, referred to as simply 'HD (Haswell)'. The same is true for Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge, although with Haswell the i3 CPU range upgraded to HD 4400 or HD 4600 - a significant leap in performance.  As the graphics power is low for full 3D titles, and as such we test on lower frequencies, we might see the CPU power matter more here than with our Devil's Canyon review.

F1 2013

F1 2013 (Processor Graphics), Average FPS

F1 2013 (Processor Graphics), Minimum FPS

Bioshock Infinite

Bioshock Infinite (Processor Graphics), Average FPS

Bioshock Infinite (Processor Graphics), Minimum FPS

Tomb Raider

Tomb Raider (Processor Graphics), Average FPS

Tomb Raider (Processor Graphics), Minimum FPS

Sleeping Dogs

Sleeping Dogs (Processor Graphics), Average FPS

Sleeping Dogs (Processor Graphics), Minimum FPS

Company of Heroes 2

Company of Heroes 2 (Processor Graphics), Average FPS

Company of Heroes 2 (Processor Graphics), Minimum FPS

CompuBench 1.5

CompuBench is a new addition to our CPU benchmark suite, and as such we have only tested it on the following processors.  The software uses OpenCL commands to process parallel information for a range of tests, and we use the flow management and particle simulation benchmarks here.

CompuBench 1.5 Optical Flow (Processor Graphics)

CompuBench 1.5 64k Particles (Processor Graphics)

3DMark Fire Strike

3DMark FireStrike (Processor Graphics)

The increase in speed due to overclocking only has one effect on gaming using the internal graphics - a slight advantage to minimum frame rates.  Unfortunately the IGP is crippled too much to see any gain in performance for average frame rates and AMD APUs at similar power outputs have up to a 2x advantage.

CPU Benchmarks Discrete GPU Gaming
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  • extide - Tuesday, July 15, 2014 - link

    EDIT: I am talking about stock speeds, of course.
  • plonk420 - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    could you guys do some more games (and try the Celeron G1820 or G1840--the cheapest Haswell Intels on The Egg)? don't have a lot of cash at the moment and am curious about the cheapest of cheap livingroom gaming boxes i could build...
  • Marburg U - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    Ian, there is no such thing as "free performance" when the cpu is designed and sold as an overclockable cpu.
  • MikeMurphy - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    It's free given there is no price premium with this particular chip.
  • ervinshiznit - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    Ian, you are mistaken. The core i5 and i7 K editions have AVX and AES support. Look it up on Intel's ARK processor feature filter. They do not have TSX support, in contrast to their non K counterparts.
  • Ian Cutress - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    That's what I meant :) Having the new DC CPUs support VT-d and TSX and writing about those in the last week had my mind at a slant.
  • kaelynthedove78 - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    Warning: rant ahead.

    It is 2014Q3 and still, no reason to upgrade from Sandy Bidge 2600K @ 4.8Ghz, $30 air tower cooler setup to anything Intel has to offer. Load temperature is <80C after 24 hours of non-stop Linpack.

    I feel so sad, Ivy Bridge was a downgrade for me, Haswell was an even hotter downgrade and now Devil's Canyon can't reach 4.8GHz even with water cooling. $500 for same performance but hotter than ever? How do these products get raving reviews?!

    I need single-thread performance so more slow cores won't help me. Three and half years waiting and still nothing. AMD, VIA, anybody, please come and kick Intel in the behind so I could finally get >10% performance increase after four generations!
  • DanNeely - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    Unless we find a successor material for Silicon, at this point I don't think it's going to happen. We appear to've hit an effective clock speed wall; and making the cores/caches themselves bigger is deep into diminishing returns.
  • Casecutter - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    Thanks for this. I came away with the same deduction after reading other various articles, but those weren't as clear-cut or upfront with the findings. While nice price to start for a CPU, I think after investing in an acceptable OC'n mobo and good cooler, why? An i3 with any regular mobo and stock cooler offers better gaming, and if that's what it about Pentium AE isn't the best route. For the average entry level builds, it best to not give a kid or novice the impression that hitting 4.7Ghz isn’t for the faint of heart.

    I would’ve like to have seen and FX-6300 as that has been my go-to chip for budget Gaming builds, at $100 along with ASRock 970 Extreme3 R2.0 bundled for around $160 from MicroCenter you can’t bet against it. With most any $20-30 aftermarket cooler, I’ll get a 4.5-4.7Ghz and call it good. For Gaming most every title plays better verses the i3 (say perhaps Arkham City or Shogun 2), while heading into i5 territory.
  • Ian Cutress - Monday, July 14, 2014 - link

    I'm retesting some AM3 CPUs right now and have an FX-6350 being tested at this very moment. Check anandtech.com/bench in the next few days and I'll upload my results.

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