The Intel Core i7-8086K Review
by Ian Cutress on June 11, 2018 8:00 AM EST- Posted in
- CPUs
- Intel
- Core i7
- Anniversary
- Coffee Lake
- i7-8086K
- 5 GHz
- 8086K
- 5.0 GHz
Shadow of Mordor
The next title in our testing is a battle of system performance with the open world action-adventure title, Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor (SoM for short). Produced by Monolith and using the LithTech Jupiter EX engine and numerous detail add-ons, SoM goes for detail and complexity. The main story itself was written by the same writer as Red Dead Redemption, and it received Zero Punctuation’s Game of The Year in 2014.
A 2014 game is fairly old to be testing now, however SoM has a stable code and player base, and can still stress a PC down to the ones and zeroes. At the time, SoM was unique, offering a dynamic screen resolution setting allowing users to render at high resolutions that are then scaled down to the monitor. This form of natural oversampling was designed to let the user experience a truer vision of what the developers wanted, assuming you had the graphics hardware to power it but had a sub-4K monitor.
The title has an in-game benchmark, for which we run with an automated script implement the graphics settings, select the benchmark, and parse the frame-time output which is dumped on the drive. The graphics settings include standard options such as Graphical Quality, Lighting, Mesh, Motion Blur, Shadow Quality, Textures, Vegetation Range, Depth of Field, Transparency and Tessellation. There are standard presets as well.
We run the benchmark at 1080p and a native 4K, using our 4K monitors, at the Ultra preset. Results are averaged across four runs and we report the average frame rate, 99th percentile frame rate, and time under analysis.
All of our benchmark results can also be found in our benchmark engine, Bench.
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Marlin1975 - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
You used a "Cooler Master CLC"? Is that what comes with the CPU? If not then this is a awful review. Should use what cooler it comes with.Beany2013 - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
it doesn't come with a cooler, as far as I'm aware.Ryan Smith - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
Correct.seamonkey79 - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
Should have run it naked then, what were you thinking? /sRyan Smith - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
I was thinking that getting blocked by content filters for indecency would hurt my business...deathBOB - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
You see indecency, I see a new (and potentially lucrative) take on PC hardware reviews.Ryan Smith - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
That was already tried in the 90s. It doesn't work as well as you might think. (RIP PCXL)Alexvrb - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
See that's the problem with content filters... always chafin' me.Death666Angel - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
That would be a review of the cooler, not the CPU. And anyone buying a 400+USD CPU should invest in a decent cooler as well, that is just common sense.wr3zzz - Monday, June 11, 2018 - link
K-series CPUs don't come with coolers.