How many threads does it take to change a lightbulb? Wait, that doesn't make any sense...
The actual question is related to multi-threaded computer code. ED must be multi-threaded, but how well does it actually scale with CPU core count?
I ask as a PS4 player, because we have an 8 core processor that doesn't run terribly fast, so if ED only takes advantage of two or four cores, we're missing out on untapped performance. I have evidence that ED is under-utilizing the hardware, because my PS4 consumes less electricity when running ED compared to my other games, but there's definitely room for improvement on the graphics end. This may be due to code not optimized for 8-1 cores, and / or it may be due to GPU saturation (though a brilliant programmer can offload some GPU work to spare CPU cores).
On the PC side, have you folks found a sweet spot for core count? I've been out of the PC gaming arena for some years - is the average core count for the current desktop CPUs still four? Asked a different way, if you could get a faster dual-core CPU (assuming they still exist) or a slower quad-core, which would you go for? Would you even bother with an 8-core CPU? These questions are solely for playing Elite: Dangerous.
The actual question is related to multi-threaded computer code. ED must be multi-threaded, but how well does it actually scale with CPU core count?
I ask as a PS4 player, because we have an 8 core processor that doesn't run terribly fast, so if ED only takes advantage of two or four cores, we're missing out on untapped performance. I have evidence that ED is under-utilizing the hardware, because my PS4 consumes less electricity when running ED compared to my other games, but there's definitely room for improvement on the graphics end. This may be due to code not optimized for 8-1 cores, and / or it may be due to GPU saturation (though a brilliant programmer can offload some GPU work to spare CPU cores).
On the PC side, have you folks found a sweet spot for core count? I've been out of the PC gaming arena for some years - is the average core count for the current desktop CPUs still four? Asked a different way, if you could get a faster dual-core CPU (assuming they still exist) or a slower quad-core, which would you go for? Would you even bother with an 8-core CPU? These questions are solely for playing Elite: Dangerous.