There are test out to back the statement about GFX cards being the major difference in the more visually demanding games, this is why the ph2 X4's are a good buy not because they are the better CPU's.
They can in many cases be a superior choice for many users here at GS HW discuss. and is also widely recommended from most people in "what should i buy" questions.
Thing is that many people is mistaken taking that A:/Q: as AMD's CPU's being better while their products not offering the same high-end performance.
The intel high-end is without question the better CPU's if the app choose to utilize that amount of power, a quick look at most CPU benchmarks can tell you that, but most games seem to do fine without as much power, even a slower quad seems to run just about any modern game with flying colors.
I am not agreeing to that people who brogh the Q6xxx four-something years ago made a really good buy, i'd rather think of it like they did buy a very expencive product long before it was needed, but they can still play most games just fine, even the ones that need four cores to work corectly.
If anything was a good buy the cheaper C2D's were extremely long lived, they lasted almost until today and still plays many games fine, the same question were about when it was x2 vs. C2D, today we can see the performance difference's in games on those two, the C2Duos are performing better with a margin but at the time the lesser Athlons were fine to play games with, I'd like to say that history will repeat itself again. The i7's will fare better in the future as they're the better performing ones but people with Ph2's will get all they need from their CPU's until it's time to upgrade.
Out from a gamer perspective the ph2's are great buys but that is not to be mixed with the actual performance vs. the i7's, the few games witch is really CPU bound intel highend usally takes the lead by margin.
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