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Intel's Kaby Lake 7700K CPU increases overclocking headroom by a noticeable amount, bringing the 5GHz stable mark back into reach. Over the past few months, there have been many leaks revealing ...
The i7-7700K ends up outperforming the i5-7600K by 35 percent on average in our CPU tests. Single-threaded performance isn't much faster, but in video encoding tasks in particular Core i7 can be a ...
The Core i7-7700K is Intel’s latest flagship enthusiast processor, and it looks quick on paper. It fails to make significant architecture or production process changes that might boost performance.
In 3D Mark the 1800X Ryzen processor scored consistently higher than Intel’s 7700K. However, this score is made up of three parts: two graphics tests and a CPU test.
Intel's Core i3-7350K "Kaby Lake" processors gets fully examined and overclocked as we compare it against its bigger brother, the 7700K CPU.
The Core i7-7700K is set to be Intel’s flagship desktop CPU built on a 14nm manufacturing process, the same process used for Skylake and Broadwell.
But if you simply can’t wait to build a new PC and want a top-of-the-line CPU, the 7700K is what you should get. It's faster than the 6700K, and costs about the same.
But without trying to take anything away from Intel, the Core i7-7700K is still a very capable gaming processor, but as a quad-­core in 2019 it's starting to falter.
The quad-core i7-7700K, which sits at the very top of the Kaby Lake lineup, is less interesting. Compared to the sixth-gen i7-6700K Skylake processor that preceded it, the i7-7700K gains a small ...
The Ryzen 7 1800X we tested for this review scored surprisingly close to the Core i7-6950X, a processor that sells for $1,000 more, and the chip easily beat the Core i7-7700K in multi-core tasks.
The Core i7 7700K isn't a worthy CPU upgrade, only really of any interest if you're dead set on buying a brand new, pre-built i7 rig. So, bring on Zen. Don't let us down.