You guys know what kind of performance I can get with a 7600x and paired with a 4070 super and 4800mhz RAM 32GB on new games

Just from my knowledge you should be able to get rock steady frames on 1080p ultra in nearly all games, 1440p is pushing it a bit harder. Those specs are definitely "upper mid-range". Is this a laptop or a desktop PC, and is it new to you? There are some settings you can tweak in Windows to push performance more, like changing settings in the Nvidia app, turning on High Performance mode in Windows settings, making sure all drivers are up to date, etc.

Here are some useful links:

AMD Ryzen Drivers - downloads the Ryzen Master utility updater tool thing, useful to run this at least once every ~6-months

Windows Central: Win11 Performance Tweaks Guide

Perhaps look into updating BIOS as well if it's outdated. These are just the very very basic tips to make sure that your hardware is running as best as possible. From there, I'd look into the game specifically, perhaps it's just unoptimized since it is a new game.
 
The paradox in your build would be the ram's transfer speeds. The sweet spot for AMD's AM5 platform is DDR5-6000MHz or DDR5-6000MT/s, so you've left performance on the table.

The 7600x is supposed to paired with a comparable GPU and grant you 1440p gaming.

On second thoughts, you should list your specs to the build like so:
CPU:
CPU cooler:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:
Monitor:
include the age of the PSU apart from it's make and model. BIOS version for your motherboard at this moment of time.
 
Dec 5, 2024
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The paradox in your build would be the ram's transfer speeds. The sweet spot for AMD's AM5 platform is DDR5-6000MHz or DDR5-6000MT/s, so you've left performance on the table.

The 7600x is supposed to paired with a comparable GPU and grant you 1440p gaming.

On second thoughts, you should list your specs to the build like so:
CPU:
CPU cooler:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:
Monitor:
include the age of the PSU apart from it's make and model. BIOS version for your motherboard at this moment of time.
I just found out my ram is rated 5600 max, so I will enable that later when I get home

also.. gpu drivers are updated to the latest, 581.29

my monitor is msi 144hz gsync compatible,

power supply is barely a year old, msi modular 80plus gold 850 watts,

my rtx 4070 super is the non ti 12 gb vram,

the cooler is im pretty sure the peerless assassin,

mobo is b650m asrock, its got 1 tb internal SSD and running win 11 i(updated to the latest) and the drive D got an M2 2TB from kingston
 
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Clearly Op just needed to enable EXPO (or XMP, some BIOS have that instead) in the BIOS to get ram to right speed.
I not sure he notice a major difference, but it also depends on the latency settings of the sticks. He might get some speed out of it
k32npnY.jpeg

I did.
 
Dec 5, 2024
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Clearly Op just needed to enable EXPO (or XMP, some BIOS have that instead) in the BIOS to get ram to right speed.
I not sure he notice a major difference, but it also depends on the latency settings of the sticks. He might get some speed out of it
k32npnY.jpeg

I did.

Hello,

yes I just did that yesterday, enabled DOCP 1 (there are two other options, DOCP 2 and DOCP tweaked)

I don't wanna mess around so I just chose DOCP 1, and run CRONOS again and yes, there's indeed a boost

AVG FPS NOW went up 55 to 59 FPS, and this still on native 1440P with everything MAX except raytracing (no DLSS or FG enabled)
 
mobo is b650m asrock
ASRock is the brand of the motherboard, B650 is the chipset for the board while the M designates an matx form factor. Since ASRock have a number of B650 chipsetted matx motherboard's in their portfolio, what is the model for your motherboard? That being said, what BIOS version are you currently on? You can pass on a screenshot of CPU-Z's mainboard tab.

Is your iGPU enabled in BIOS?

Yes, these questions are relevant, just as the ram's info helped you realize you had performance on the table.
 
Last edited:
Dec 5, 2024
43
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mobo is b650m asrock
ASRock is the brand of the motherboard, B650 is the chipset for the board while the M designates an matx form factor. Since ASRock have a number of B650 chipsetted matx motherboard's in their portfolio, what is the model for your motherboard? That being said, what BIOS version are you currently on? You can pass on a screenshot of CPU-Z's mainboard tab.

Is your iGPU enabled in BIOS?

Yes, these questions are relevant, just as the ram's info helped you realize you had performance on the table.

ok... ****, I made a mistake, I just installed CPU-Z because it gives me a clear picture of everything...

(yes, I did not built this, someone did it for me), I saw the Asrock box as to why I assumed its my mobo

anyway, here's the complete details (apologies)

AMD RYZEN 5 7600X (max TDP 105 W)

ASUSTEK COMPUTER INC, PRIME A620-PLUS WIFI and the BIOS is ver 0213 (DATE 5/17/2023)

DDR5-5600 UDIMM (2800MHZ) KINGSTON - XMP 3.0

NVIDIA GEFORCE RTX 4070 SUPER (code name AD 104-350) TDP 220 W
 
PRIME A620-PLUS WIFI
I wish you had a better quality motherboard. The one you currently have is considered bottom of the barrel due to the lackluster VRM design. I say lackluster since Asus seem to have made it their objective to not specify the VRM layout, nor have pictures to clearly illustrate the VRM area. To me that's a tactic to conceal.

As for the BIOS,
BIOS is ver 0213 (DATE 5/17/2023)
That's first release, you have many BIOS versions pending update. I presume, the latter BIOS versions would likely grant you a little more performance out of your platform, outside of security vulnerability issues being plugged. I would advise that you make sure you're on the latest chipset driver for your motherboard then flash the BIOS to the latest version.

If your iGPU is enabled, disabling it should help allocate a little more ram to your entire platform. You would need to run DDU and remove all GPU drivers(intel, AMD and Nvidia) then manually install the latest GPU driver sourced from Nvidia's support site.

You would see more performance if you were on a DDR5-6000MHz/DDR5-6000MT/s or DDR5-6400MHz/DDR5-6400MT/s with tight latencies, with AMD's E.X.P.O advertised on it's package, dual channel ram kit.
 
Dec 5, 2024
43
49
70
PRIME A620-PLUS WIFI
I wish you had a better quality motherboard. The one you currently have is considered bottom of the barrel due to the lackluster VRM design. I say lackluster since Asus seem to have made it their objective to not specify the VRM layout, nor have pictures to clearly illustrate the VRM area. To me that's a tactic to conceal.

As for the BIOS,
BIOS is ver 0213 (DATE 5/17/2023)
That's first release, you have many BIOS versions pending update. I presume, the latter BIOS versions would likely grant you a little more performance out of your platform, outside of security vulnerability issues being plugged. I would advise that you make sure you're on the latest chipset driver for your motherboard then flash the BIOS to the latest version.

If your iGPU is enabled, disabling it should help allocate a little more ram to your entire platform. You would need to run DDU and remove all GPU drivers(intel, AMD and Nvidia) then manually install the latest GPU driver sourced from Nvidia's support site.

You would see more performance if you were on a DDR5-6000MHz/DDR5-6000MT/s or DDR5-6400MHz/DDR5-6400MT/s with tight latencies, with AMD's E.X.P.O advertised on it's package, dual channel ram kit.

thank you for this, for now I would like to do more testing on upcoming games while sticking to its default settings (because the guy who can do this all for me is NA at the moment, he's a busy fellow)

I will try to run Dying Light The Beast later on at 1440P and see what kind of performance I will get