Gaming Benchmarks
As always, an RTX 3090 Founders Edition from Nvidia is used for the gaming tests, with maximized temperature and power consumption limits, for the lowest possible GPU bottleneck. The performance data is recorded with Nvidia Frameview 1.2, based on the open-source software Presentmon. Like last time, there are again three relatively different game titles, Counter Strike: Global Offensive (CSGO) as an example of a more latency-sensitive title, Cyberpunk 2077 and Shadow of the Tomb Raider with a balanced preference and a slight preference for bandwidth, respectively. Cyberpunk has recently received a larger patch, but since the performance has decreased overall and also for better comparability, we are still testing with version 1.31.
In gaming at 1440p, even an RTX 3090 is pretty much always the bottleneck in the render pipeline. Accordingly, the gains in RAM are at best measurable here, but probably never noticeable. Still, the G.Skill kit makes it to the top 3 positions in all games, with DDR5-7000, DDR5-6800, and DDR5-6400 in the top three positions. Yes, I measured, but the dominance is confirmed several times.
The ranking is not quite as clear for the frame time variances, which effectively express jerkiness in gaming in numbers. However, we are also in the area of measurement tolerance or the variance between benchmark runs here.
In 1080p or Full HD and the FPS or 1% low FPS, the trend with the G.Skill modules on the first places is confirmed again. And the gain from XMP to manual overclocking is also another significant leap. The numbers speak for themselves.
With the frame time variances in 1080p, the ranking is at least a bit more reproducible again. The DDR5 kits with clock rates beyond 6000 Mbps and the DDR4 comparison config fight for the upper half of the chart in all titles here.
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