Review: Intel Core i9-10850K

by Tarinder Sandhu on 14 October 2020, 14:01

Tags: Intel (NASDAQ:INTC)

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Conclusion

...What it lacks in sheer multithreaded oomph is mostly compensated for by better gaming credentials.

Intel has been facing a mainstream CPU headwind since rival AMD arrived armed with Ryzen in 2017. The latest 10th Gen chips do a better job than previous generations of combatting the advancing AMD threat as Core generally matches Ryzen on a thread count at comparable prices.

That's true until we reach the top of the stack, where Intel's 10 cores are trumped by 12- and 16-core Ryzens. This situation is unlikely to change in the short term, so Intel needs to provide the enthusiast with extra incentive to go down its established route rather than favour Ryzen.

Part of this strategy is to offer a lower-priced Core i9 chip that is practically identical to the range-topper in most performance respects. Priced at £440, the Core i9-10850K is available for substantially less money than the 10900K and serves as a viable solution to AMD's 3900X(T) processors. What it lacks in sheer multithreaded oomph is mostly compensated for by better gaming credentials evident at lower resolutions.

Ordinarily such innate characteristics would be enough for the Core i9-10850K to garner a recommendation as a well-rounded solution for a premium build. But with Zen 3-imbued Ryzen 5000-series chips around the corner and Intel promising a PCIe 4.0-riding Rocket of its own within a few months, now is not a great time to invest in older technology unless you find it at bargain basement prices.

The Good
 
The Bad
10 cores, 20 threads for the mainstream
Still class-leading gaming credentials
Solid multithreaded performance
Lots of Z490 motherboards
 
Next-gen rivals are amassing
Energy efficiency not great
Stuck on PCIe 3.0



Intel Core i9-10850K

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Makes the 10900k at ~£540 entirely obsolete.
Indeed 100% agree

They could have reduced the price of the 10900K but that would have pissed everyone off - so they introduce this one chop 100Mhz off the speeds (probably an identical chip once overclocked) and price it where they need to.

crazy but good for the consumer
If you're planning on buying parts, possibly buy them from Amazon, or elsewhere, as you will probably be charged a re-stocking fee by Scan!
“now is not a great time to invest in older technology unless you find it at bargain basement prices.”


Well, you could argue the Ryzen 5xxx CPU's are now ‘older technology’ seeing as they're the last AM4 socket CPU's we'll see, with no further upgrades possible.

For people dropping them into an existing Ryzen build, that shouldn't matter, it will be a nice ‘last hurrah’ upgrade, but for anyone wanting to build a Ryzen rig from the ground up, an EOL socket wouldn't make much sense.

More of a problem for the 6 & 8 core parts than the 12 & 16 though, seeing as they will have all the multi-core power you'll need for many years.
And people are moaning about AMD and price increases….