These comparison videos are getting better each time. Addition of Std. Dev. data is very welcome, as it can demonstrate frametime stability better than %1 lows. 👏
The power difference and temps were interesting. I kept hearing how bad it was on CPUs and how people were at 80-100C on 5800X3D's etc. I think I peaked at like 65C on 5700X3D with an AIO. And that's with the ambient temp being almost 30C.
Thats cause whoever build those machines skimp on cooling. Temperatures arent a software issue, but bad build configuration. A build should be more than capable of handling the entire system being completely saturated and while the 5800X3D is a hot chip, its not hard to keep it at 70-80C with a decent air cooler while still maxing out the clocks.
@@skorne7682 the different kernels and in some cases sched_ext make that huge difference. for Fedora you can get the cachyOS kernel via a copr, and sched_ext should also be easy to install and turn on/off depending on if a game runs.
@@skorne7682 There's not much "optimization" going on for the most part, just pre-installed drivers etc. handy stuff. CachyOS might have some kernel optimizations too.
These comparison videos are getting better each time. Addition of Std. Dev. data is very welcome, as it can demonstrate frametime stability better than %1 lows. 👏
Great benchmarking and data presentation. Subscribed :)
Great job. I love when i new game comes in and I search for Linux pref and you are right there. Thank you so much!
The power difference and temps were interesting. I kept hearing how bad it was on CPUs and how people were at 80-100C on 5800X3D's etc. I think I peaked at like 65C on 5700X3D with an AIO. And that's with the ambient temp being almost 30C.
Thats cause whoever build those machines skimp on cooling. Temperatures arent a software issue, but bad build configuration. A build should be more than capable of handling the entire system being completely saturated and while the 5800X3D is a hot chip, its not hard to keep it at 70-80C with a decent air cooler while still maxing out the clocks.
Thank you for the test!
Wow, ~10% more FPS on Linux and better frametime.
I am definitely getting worse performance in Linux. I am using Fedora with an nvidia card, not one of these gaming optimised distros though.
@@skorne7682 I mean you can get the cachyos kernel from the fedora copr. Maby the optimized kernel will help.
@@skorne7682 the different kernels and in some cases sched_ext make that huge difference. for Fedora you can get the cachyOS kernel via a copr, and sched_ext should also be easy to install and turn on/off depending on if a game runs.
@@skorne7682 Depending on which Nvidia GPU, ie 10 series, much lower performance is expected.
@@skorne7682 There's not much "optimization" going on for the most part, just pre-installed drivers etc. handy stuff. CachyOS might have some kernel optimizations too.
Great job! Thanks!
I would like to see the difference with Nvidia. Great video btw
If I had Nvidia hardware I would gladly
Can’t play anymore using Linux
puting graph for 100 vs 111% max fps when you cut min value is pointless... we DONT SEE the difference, we have to read it ANYWAY
The graph is for average FPS, the graph before that show min/ave/max
Half of the video are graph's...
1/3 Unfortunately. The full video should be graphs only. This video goal should be comparison video and benchmarking, gameplay.