Intel Core i5-12400 Review and Gaming Benchmarks
Citiraj:
The upcoming Core i5-12400 has what it takes to make a real mark in its price range. With its 6 P-Cores and HT, it’s not only virtually as fast as AMD’s Ryzen 5 5600X on paper. So what are all the upgraders and retrofitters doing? If you own a Ryzen 5 as Zen3 (or maybe Zen2+), you don’t need the Core i5-12400 as a pure side-grade, especially since the platform also costs money and currently leaves some questions unanswered. However, the small Core i5-12400 is highly interesting for upgraders and newcomers who need to save a bit or are more oriented towards ecological guidelines. Nowadays this is also a possibility after all. Intel probably won’t take any existing customers away from AMD in gaming, but the tide will certainly turn quickly with new customers, if availability and prices for Alder Lake including the platform are right and these DDR4 motherboards also appear on the market at acceptable prices.
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Izvor: igor's LAB
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AMD Ryzen 9 9950X | Noctua NH-U12A chromax.black | MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk Wi-Fi | 128GB Kingston FURY Beast DDR5-5200 | 256GB AData SX8200 Pro NVMe | 2x4TB WD Red Plus | Fractal Define 7 Compact | Seasonic GX-750
AMD Ryzen 5 7600 | Noctua NH-U12A chromax.black | MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk Wi-Fi | 128GB Kingston FURY Beast DDR5-5200 | 256GB AData SX8200 Pro NVMe | 2x12TB WD Red Plus | Fractal Define 7 Compact | eVGA 650 B5
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