Watch Dogs 2 CPU Benchmark - Threads Matter P2: Watch Dogs 2 CPU Benchmark Results

With Ryzen around the corner, we wanted to publish a full CPU benchmark of Watch Dogs 2 in our test course, as we’ve recently found the game to be heavily thread-intensive and responsive to CPU changes. The game even posts sizable gains for some overclocks, like on the i5-2500K, and establishes a real-world platform of when CPU choice matters. It’s easy to bottleneck GPUs with Watch Dogs 2, which is something of a unique characteristic for modern games. Watch Dogs 2 is a familiar title by now at the GN test bench, and while we’ve published a GPU benchmark and a more recent CPU optimization guide, we never published a comprehensive CPU benchmark. We’ve gathered together all our results here, from the 2500K revisit all the way to Kaby Lake reviews (see: 7600K review & 7350K review), and analyzed what exactly makes a CPU work well with Watch Dogs 2 and why. In this Watch Dogs 2 CPU benchmark, we’ll recap some graphics optimization tips for CPUs and test whether an i7 is worth it, alongside tests of the 7600K, 7700K, 6600K, 7350K, FX-8370, and more.

Test Methodology

We’ve explained our methodology in previous Watch Dogs 2 coverage, but just to recap: we walk down a specific hill around 3-4PM in-game time, clear skies, and log framerate using FRAPS, then average these multiple runs (per test) together. The runs typically have near-identical average framerates and mild variation among 1% and 0.1% lows. We use the High preset as a baseline and for this comparative benchmark, as we’re not trying to overload the GPU, but still want to represent a real scenario. 1080p is used for resolution.

In terms of user-controlled settings, the most intensive options are “extra detail” and “geometry,” set to 0 and high respectively. More complex geometry means more draw calls added to the graphics pipe, requiring the CPU to work harder at distributing calls to the GPU. For more detail and performance comparisons, check our CPU optimization guide.

As much hardware as possible is kept consistent between runs, but obviously several motherboards and sets of RAM were necessary for compatibility with all the different CPUs tested. An EVGA GTX 1080 FTW ($590) was used in all tests in order to artificially create a CPU bottleneck (two 1080s in SLI gave worse performance scaling at the time testing began, though driver updates have since shipped). We’ve tested an AMD CPU this time around in the interest of completeness, but until the release of Ryzen, there are some serious limitations on AMD WD2 performance. Much of this is to do with core architecture.

Note also that we intend to benchmark the FX-6300 and other Athlon series chips (again) in future coverage, as we move ever closer to filling-in our CPU benchmark for the full Kaby Lake & inevitable Ryzen SKUs.

Average FPS, 1% low, and 0.1% low times are measured. We do not measure maximum or minimum FPS results as we consider these numbers to be pure outliers. Instead, we take an average of the lowest 1% of results (1% low) to show real-world, noticeable dips; we then take an average of the lowest 0.1% of results for severe spikes.

Further note that some CPUs were overclocked during this testing, purely an artifact of when we reviewed or revisited those CPUs. Not every CPU on this bench has been reviewed or revisited recently, which means not every CPU has overclocked numbers. We add overclocking benchmarks incrementally per review or per revisit, as it is plainly unreasonable to overclock every single CPU for this benchmark (that doubles the workload, and thus becomes unprofitable/unsustainable as a business).

Hardware Tested

Intel CPUs:

Intel Core i7-7700K OC 5.1GHz HT1

Intel Core i7-7700K OC 4.8GHz HT1

Intel Core i7-7700K Stock HT1

Intel Core i7-6700K Stock HT1

Intel Core i7-4790K Stock HT1

Intel Core i7-7700K Stock HT0

Intel Core i5-7600K Stock

Intel Core i5-6600K Stock

Intel Core i7-2600K Stock HT1

Intel Core i5-4690K Stock

Intel Core i5-2500K OC 4.5GHz

Intel Core i3-7350K Stock

Intel Core i5-3570K Stock

Intel Core i5-2500K Stock

Intel i3-6300 Stock

AMD CPUs:

AMD FX-8370 Stock

More to come very soon!

Motherboards & Memory:

Intel Kaby Lake series: MSI Z270 Gaming Pro Carbon w/ Corsair Vengeance 32GB 3200MHz

Intel Skylake Series: MSI Z170 Gaming M7 w/ Corsair Vengeance 32GB 3200MHz

Intel Haswell/Devil’s Canyon Series: Gigabyte Z97X G1 WIFI-BK with HyperX Savage 32GB 2400MHz

Intel Ivy Bridge Series: MSI Z77 GD65 with HyperX Savage 32GB 2400MHz

Intel Sandy Bridge Series: MSI Z77 GD65 with HyperX Savage 32GB 2400MHz

AMD FX Series: Gigabyte G1 Gaming with 32GB Corsair Vengeance 1866MHz (unstable beyond this speed)

GPU & Drivers:

1 x EVGA GTX 1080 FTW with 376.33 drivers

OS:

Win 10 x64

Continue to Page 2 for the results.