As a gamer in a budget, how much performance am I missing by sticking to DDR4 in order to save costs? I’ve been trying to find info online, but it seems inconclusive - some places say it can net you like 20% difference, others that it has no significant difference, and I’m not sure which of the two is telling the truth. Same goes for performance in home servers.
There are some differences, but real world applications, especially in the gaming space, are minuscule. You do almost touch on another important point; it’s hard to get benchmarks because you’re not going to find a processor that was made for both. Basically a single gen of intel is all we get. FWIW that gen showed a roughly 5% performance on a typical game, and 10% on a known memory intensive game. That’s 3 frames at 60fps, or ~7 frames at 144, and this assumes you actually need that last bit of performance.
As a gamer in a budget, how much performance am I missing by sticking to DDR4 in order to save costs? I’ve been trying to find info online, but it seems inconclusive - some places say it can net you like 20% difference, others that it has no significant difference, and I’m not sure which of the two is telling the truth. Same goes for performance in home servers.
The difference doesn’t necessarily come from the RAM itself, but that the best processors for gaming these days don’t support DDR4 anymore.
There are some differences, but real world applications, especially in the gaming space, are minuscule. You do almost touch on another important point; it’s hard to get benchmarks because you’re not going to find a processor that was made for both. Basically a single gen of intel is all we get. FWIW that gen showed a roughly 5% performance on a typical game, and 10% on a known memory intensive game. That’s 3 frames at 60fps, or ~7 frames at 144, and this assumes you actually need that last bit of performance.