How many CPU cores do games need?



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Test Setup

Intel Core i7-980X CPU, HyperThreading and power saving states disabled;



Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD7 motherboard



6GB G.Skill Ripjaw 1,600MHz CL8 memory, set to these timings





Asus ATI Radeon HD 5870 1GB graphics card



EVGA Nvidia GTX 470 1,280MB graphics card





Titan Fenrir CPU cooler



Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 1TB SATA Hard Disk



Seasonic X-Series 650W PSU





Intel inf 9.1.1.1025



ATI Catalyst 10.6 WHQL



Nvidia Forceware 257.21 WHQL



Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium x64



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PC gaming is often a central concern in the purchase of a new PC, but knowing how many CPU cores to buy - whether it's worth the upsell from two to three or four, or even six, is a key issue.Do gamers really need a quad-core, or six-core CPU, or is a dual-core CPU still good enough? Which game engines are multi-threaded, and to what extent? We've aimed to answer these questions by running some of the latest and most popular games to show CPU scaling across cores. We've also tested Nvidia and ATI hardware separately because graphics drivers can affect how the system works - and of course, if the drivers themselves are multi-threaded it will benefit the gaming experience.We used an Intel Core i7-980X to maximise the core count available, but we disabled Hyperthreading and power saving states. A hyperthreading core is not a 'real' core, it merely just opens up 'what's left' of the available CPU pipeline so could easily have created inconsistencies in our tests. All games tested were also entirely run from the hard disk - no slower optical media was involved.