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Worth upgrading from 8700k

Man of Honour
Joined
13 Oct 2006
Posts
91,435
+1 for the 7800X3D. If you're not doing anything other than gaming and general usage it's the best option.

If doing some productivity stuff then the 14700K is a great all rounder, but it has no real upgrade path.

It is a bit of an awkward situation really - the 7950X3D makes up for a lot of the areas the 7800X3D falls down outside of gaming, but it is significantly more expensive than the 14700K which has much better balanced performance than the 7800X3D. Though I have zero regrets buying the 14700K the mediocre PCI-e 5.0 support and limited upgrade path is a downside - albeit there are rumours Intel will be releasing another round of LGA1700 CPUs as well as 1800.
 
Soldato
Joined
27 Nov 2005
Posts
24,760
Location
Guernsey
Though I have zero regrets buying the 14700K the mediocre PCI-e 5.0 support and limited upgrade path is a downside - albeit there are rumours Intel will be releasing another round of LGA1700 CPUs as well as 1800.

I never really cared about if there a cpu upgrade past or not as I always needed a new motherboard by the time I upgrade due other missing features that a new motherboard normally brings
 
Associate
OP
Joined
18 Jan 2010
Posts
782
Location
London
I never really cared about if there a cpu upgrade past or not as I always needed a new motherboard by the time I upgrade due other missing features that a new motherboard normally brings
I'm kind of the same. I tend to try and get eek out my hardware as long as possible. But I just got a new 34" ultra wide 1440p and a 4080, feel like I've been missing out for my tightness for a long time. ill probably not leave it as long next time, and there is always a fair market for a few years old mobo/CPU combos.
 
Man of Honour
Joined
13 Oct 2006
Posts
91,435
I never really cared about if there a cpu upgrade past or not as I always needed a new motherboard by the time I upgrade due other missing features that a new motherboard normally brings

There has rarely been any consistency in the past anyhow, sometimes a company drops long term plans/promises, sometimes a new CPU comes out which renders everything before it obsolete and sometimes a platform gets an update it originally didn't look like it was getting, etc. likewise I tend to buy what works for me now and worry about upgrading later when the time comes, often just replacing the whole thing anyway.
 
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