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Review: Intel Core i9-9900KS

by Tarinder Sandhu on 30 October 2019, 13:01

Tags: Intel (NASDAQ:INTC)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaee6r

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Conclusion

...when Intel wins the gain is small. When AMD wins the gain is big.

Core i9-9900KS represents the culmination of Intel's mainstream desktop processor strategy for this year. The underlying Coffee Lake blueprint, still based on 14nm technology, provides decent IPC that enables the chip, at its lofty 5.0GHz all-core speed, to exhibit class-leading gaming performance, superb system responsiveness, and huge versatility thanks to myriad of supporting motherboards.

This £500 limited-edition 8C16T CPU, which is only available through the 2019 holiday season, and backed by a meagre one-year warranty, is effectively an Intel-overclocked Core i9-9900K - a processor that's already been out for a year.

Even if the Core i9-9900KS is more of a marketing stunt than volume-selling product, such a chip would ordinarily have stood tall in the enthusiast or gamer's mind had rival AMD not made significant strides with its Ryzen processors. While Intel has spent the year massaging frequencies on a long-in-the-tooth architecture, AMD has successfully introduced Zen 2 and, crucially for the content creator, upped the mainstream core count to 16C32T, all the while providing impressive motherboard features and support.

Problematic for the Core i9-9900KS is that though it is better at gaming than the price-equivalent Ryzen 9 3900X, the lead is mostly less than 10 per cent, which is unlikely to be meaningful once the resolution is turned up enough for the game to become limited by the GPU. On the other hand, content creators running big projects see immediate and obvious benefit in going down the more-core route offered by the available12C24T Ryzen 3900X chip. When Intel wins the gain is small. When AMD wins the gain is big.

All of this means that, right now, no one mainstream chip is the best at everything. The Intel Core i9-9900KS therefore occupies a niche segment of the premium desktop CPU market where class-leading gaming is the most important criterion. Enough to tempt you? Feel free to let us know.

The Good
 
The Bad
5.0GHz on all cores
Class-leading gaming credentials
Decent all-round perf
Excellent choice of motherboards
 
Runs hot, particularly when OC'd
Not energy efficient
One-year warranty



Intel Core i9-9900KS

HEXUS.where2buy*

The Intel Core i9-9900KS processor is available to buy at Scan Computers.

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At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



*UK-based HEXUS community members are eligible for free delivery and priority customer service through the SCAN.care@HEXUS forum.



HEXUS Forums :: 19 Comments

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So, you take an existing Coffee Lake CPU, pick the best silicon, tweak the stock settings to add > 30W to the base power limit, allow mobo manufacturers to run it as fast as they like, and you end up with a chip that barely scrapes past the 3800X (in MT workloads) whilst consuming 65W more at the wall?

*slow clap*
Massively underwhelming, though it has to be said, if you're building a gaming machine, nothing beats it.
Hoonigan
Massively underwhelming, though it has to be said, if you're building a gaming machine, nothing beats it.
If the only thing you do with your computer is gaming, aren't you better off with a console?

Anyway… yawns at Intel!
If you follow the £515.99 link to Scan the actual price is £549.98.
GinoLatino
Hoonigan
Massively underwhelming, though it has to be said, if you're building a gaming machine, nothing beats it.
If the only thing you do with your computer is gaming, aren't you better off with a console?

Anyway… yawns at Intel!


PLEASE tell me that was sarcasm :P