All up this leaves us with four GPUs to test at two resolutions with three quality presets.

Our test system used G.Skill’s FlareXDDR4-3200 CL14 memorywith theCorsair H115i Proinstalled.

Let’s get into the results!

Article image

Benchmarks

First up we have the 1080p ultra quality World War Z results.

Moving to 1440p sees the RTX 2080 Ti pull comfortably away from the RTX 2070 Super and RX 5700.

We do see a few oddities though when comparing the RX 5700 and RTX 2070 Super data.

Even dropping down to medium graphics parameters didn’t boost performance by much.

We’re only seeing 10-20 fps gains over ultra.

World War Z at 1440p medium parameters test shows similar scaling to the 1440p ultra results.

Moving on to some Far Cry New Dawn testing and first up we have the 1080p ultra results.

As you could see we’re very much CPU bound at 1080p, even with the RTX 2070 Super.

This allowed the 9900K to provide 15% more performance, even with the 5700.

Things get a little crazy at 1440p.

Overall though the 3900X and 9900K were evenly matched.

The last game tested is Rainbow Six Siege.

Then with the RX 580 there are no margins to speak of.

Jumping up to 1440p sees no difference in performance with both the RX 580 and RX 5700.

The margins are much the same at 1440p between the ultra and very high presets.

The Core i9 9900K shows a performance advantage when using the RTX 2070 Super or anything faster.

Lowering the quality preset to High extends Intel’s lead with the 2080 Ti at 1080p.

It was also 14% faster when looking at 1% low performance.

The 1440p ultra and high results show much of the same.

The 9900K offered a 3% performance boost with the RX 5700 which still shows a GPU limitation scenario.

With the RTX 2070 Super we start to see a larger gap.

The Ryzen 5 3600 really is thego to processorright now.

Masthead credit:3d rendered CPU conceptby Blue Andy