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  1. #1

    Default Optimum Multiboxing Performance - Thoughts on two systems

    Which system would be best for multiboxing? According to Apple, if you run apps that are not highly multithreaded, you will benefit the most from processors with a higher clock speed. However, highly multithreaded applications will perform best on processors with a higher core count, even with a slightly lower clock speed.

    So I was wondering how you guys might analyze these two systems for multiboxing.

    Processor: Intel Core i7 Extreme Edition 4960X 3.6GHz (Six-Core)
    Motherboard: ASUS Rampage IV Extreme X79 (Intel X79 Chipset) (Features USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gb/s)
    Memory: 32GB DDR3 1866MHz Corsair Dominator Platinum DHX
    Graphics: 2x SLI Dual (NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 Ti 3GB (Includes PhysX)
    Storage: 1x (240GB Solid State (By: Corsair) (Model: Neutron GTX Series) (SATA 6Gbps)

    VS.

    Processor: Intel Xeon E5 processor 2.7GHz 12-core with 30MB of L3 cache
    Motherboard: Mac Pro Motherboard
    Memory: 32GB (4x8GB) of 1866MHz DDR3 ECC
    Graphics: Dual AMD FirePro D700 GPUs with 6GB of GDDR5 VRAM
    Storage: 256GB PCIe-based flash storage


    I'm looking into a rig with 12 cores at 2.7 Ghz vs a rig with 6 cores at 3.6 Ghz. What do you guys think would have the best multiboxing performance given equal Ram and and the above graphics cards? What bottlenecks would you look for? How many accounts could one expect to run on one system versus the other. Which would you choose and why? What might you change? Thanks for your insights.
    Last edited by Chumbucket : 12-28-2013 at 09:12 PM

  2. #2
    Member JohnGabriel's Avatar
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    Its very easy to setup Raid0 with SSD drives, seems a good performance upgrade for low cost.

  3. #3

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    Quote Originally Posted by Chumbucket View Post
    How many accounts could one expect to run on one system versus the other.
    You should probably tell us what game we are talking about?

    4960X is overkill, you will get 95% of the performance for 55% of the price with an 4930K

  4. #4

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    I box Rift now. I'm thinking of boxing WoW later. My experience is that I can run about half as many toons on Rift that I can on WoW.

    Ideally, I'd like to be able to box at least 25 WoW accounts at 60 fps on my active screen and 15 fps on the inactive screens with at least medium settings on my main. I'm not sure this is even possible, but on my 2008 Mac Pro using Windows Vista and an ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT single graphics card I could box 10 at 45 fps on the active and 15 fps on inactive at medium settings on my main and low on the alts.

    The two systems are within a few hundred dollars of each other so I'm wondering if the extra cores will make a difference in multiboxing more toons or not vs. an overclocked 6 core and probably better graphics cards. I've seen benchmarks on recent Xeon processors playing WoW here that look interesting but they aren't boxing and I really don't know enough about the variables involved to make an informed decision. There are other benchmarks on the exact processor here and here but I don't know how to interpret them relative to boxing WoW and in relation their respective graphics cards.

    If I use the Mac Pro, I will be running ISboxer on Windows 8.1 using Bootcamp. This has worked well for me in the past.
    Last edited by Chumbucket : 12-29-2013 at 04:04 PM

  5. #5

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    25 accounts? Yikes, definitely go with at least 2 computers. The curve would look like this

    curve.png
    where your initial performance for number of windows is awesome, but as you add windows at some point it drops dramatically. I find with a pretty stout system ( 4930, 64GB ram, 2 Titans, Panasonic Pro SSD) that I can do 10 ok. After that it starts getting rough. I have to reduce effects quite a bit. I'm not sure what that new Apple computer is like, but I would wait for a review before splurging on it. Would be nice if some site could show it's scalability. Use input director and two computers is my vote.

    edit: doh, not sure how I remove those other graphs. And, yes, I reversed a graph from a google search :P
    Attached Images Attached Images

  6. #6
    Multiboxologist MiRai's Avatar
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    That i7 machine is going to blow the Xeon machine out of the water in, most likely, everything except for niche benchmarks like compute and heavily multi-threaded 3D applications.

    First, here's my list of things...

    CPU:
    • From what I understand, Xeons are about on par with an i7 in terms of performance in gaming at the same clock speed. The mere fact that they can't be overclocked at all makes them very undesirable at their current price tag.


    Motherboard:
    • Who knows what you're getting with that Apple brand mystery motherboard.


    Memory:
    • ECC memory has higher timings for error correction which is garbage for gaming.


    GPU:
    • FirePro D700 is apparently a W9000 which is about on par with a HD7970 / HD7970GE / R9-280X in the memory bandwidth department.
    • It could end up being handicapped for gaming because the GPU uses different drivers and its VRAM is ECC which is meant for error correction and compute rather than raw FPS.
    • FirePro cards use CrossFire Pro, which somehow differs from just regular CrossFire (probably because you can't mix-n-match different GPUs with CrossFire Pro like you can with CrossFire).
    • CrossFire, and most likely CrossFire Pro, don't work in Windowed mode, so you'd be forced to split the load of the clients across multiple monitors to even utilize the second GPU (which may or may not work depending on the game).


    Storage:
    • Do whatever you want. Just make sure you're gaming on some sort of modern SSD.



    Second, I have no idea how these two systems could be priced only a few hundred dollars apart, because that Xeon CPU ($2700) and a single W9000 GPU (3400) are $6,100 by themselves which completely dwarfs the entire i7 system (~$3500 as it's listed above) almost twice over.

    And finally, I also agree that you don't need a 4960X for the same reason that RSM72 stated.
    Last edited by MiRai : 12-29-2013 at 06:38 PM Reason: Formatting

  7. #7

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    Thanks guys for the feedback. I may be wrong but it's sounding like higher end machines tend to max out at around 10 accounts. As I could run 10 on a relatively old Mac Pro it seems that for multiboxing, hardware technology advances have not produced significant game changers. I would imagine the frame rates are slightly better and of course multitasking and video has come a long way but I'm interested in more accounts per machine.

    It also seems that the Mac Pro may be the wrong tool for the job. There are obviously many unknowns at this point but it seems clear that the FirePro graphics cards are just not the right choice for multiboxing.

    As for the cost, I may have been looking in the wrong spot. I was comparing a slightly customized Digital Storm Aventum II H2O Level 3 Performance PC to the new Mac Pro as customized above. Digital Storm is known for creating the PC Gamer Large Pixel Collider which is described as "an irresponsibly powerful" gaming machine with "uncomfortable power". The specs I came up with above are a scaled-down version of the LPC, which is actually slightly more expensive than the new Mac Pro. I'm guessing now that there is a ton of markup.

    As I'm a bit nervous about building my own machine I'm looking for a solid performer that I can use for years without too much trouble. Maybe building is the best way to go. Now I guess I'm looking for 2-3 of them. Do you guys have any suggestions? Thanks again : )

  8. #8

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    Quote Originally Posted by Chumbucket View Post
    Thanks guys for the feedback. I may be wrong but it's sounding like higher end machines tend to max out at around 10 accounts.
    I can run 15 on my computer without problems. But in large fights I experience some graphical lag and follow seems to start breaking. I run 3 computers now. 10 on each. Works perfectly. Graphics on main character on ultra.
    DARKSPEAR Alliance <Legíon of Boom>
    30 BOX DEATH DEALER. Win:Win

  9. #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by Invisahealz View Post
    I can run 15 on my computer without problems. But in large fights I experience some graphical lag and follow seems to start breaking. I run 3 computers now. 10 on each. Works perfectly. Graphics on main character on ultra.
    Nice! Would you give me the specs of your rigs?

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by Chumbucket View Post
    Nice! Would you give me the specs of your rigs?
    CHUM! haha, I just remembered we used to wreck together in TB back when i was 10 or 15 boxing. And here are my computer specs
    First computer:
    i7 990x, 24 gb ram, gtx 680 (4gb version), Asus Rampage III Black edition mother board, H100i water cooled
    Second computer:
    i7 3930k , 64gb ram, gtx 780 (3gb version), Asus Rampage IV Extreme edition mother board, H100i water cooled
    Third computer:
    i7 4770k, 32gb ram, gtx 780 (3gb version), Intel DZ876KLT75K Extreme Overclocker Motherboard, Thermaltake Extreme 2.0 Liquid Cooling
    each system runs on a platinum 1200w PSU

    Each system is runs 10 instances of wow without any problems what so ever. I originally 15 boxed on the 990x system without issues either but i wanted to start frapsing to make videos and it couldnt handle that so i started splitting the games between multiple computers and now i am up to 30 accounts. I dont think i will be expanding any further
    DARKSPEAR Alliance <Legíon of Boom>
    30 BOX DEATH DEALER. Win:Win

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