CPU Benchmark Performance: Simulation And Rendering

Simulation and Science have a lot of overlap in the benchmarking world, however for this distinction we’re separating into two segments mostly based on the utility of the resulting data. The benchmarks that fall under Science have a distinct use for the data they output – in our Simulation section, these act more like synthetics but at some level are still trying to simulate a given environment.

For the Core i3-12300, we are running DDR5 memory at the following settings:

  • DDR5-4800(B) CL40

Simulation

(3-1) DigiCortex 1.35 (32k Neuron, 1.8B Synapse)

(3-2a) Dwarf Fortress 0.44.12 World Gen 65x65, 250 Yr

(3-2b) Dwarf Fortress 0.44.12 World Gen 129x129, 550 Yr

(3-2c) Dwarf Fortress 0.44.12 World Gen 257x257, 550 Yr

(3-3) Dolphin 5.0 Render Test

(3-4a) Factorio v1.1.26 Test, 10K Trains

(3-4b) Factorio v1.1.26 Test, 10K Belts

(3-4c) Factorio v1.1.26 Test, 20K Hybrid

In tests that can utilize the higher IPC and lower core count, the Alder Lake i3 reigns supreme. The Core i3-12300 does struggle though in the tests that can really make use of a larger number of cores/threads.

Rendering

(4-1) Blender 2.83 Custom Render Test

(4-2) Corona 1.3 Benchmark

(4-3a) Crysis CPU Render at 320x200 Low

(4-3b) Crysis CPU Render at 1080p Low

(4-3c) Crysis CPU Render at 1080p Medium

(4-4) POV-Ray 3.7.1

(4-5) V-Ray Renderer

(4-6a) CineBench R20 Single Thread

(4-6b) CineBench R20 Multi-Thread

(4-7a) CineBench R23 Single Thread

(4-7b) CineBench R23 Multi-Thread

It's clear that the Core i3-12300 doesn't perform well in high core and thread situations such as rendering, although single-threaded performance is superb due to the Golden Cove-based P-cores.

CPU Benchmark Performance: Power, Office, And Science CPU Benchmark Performance: Encoding
Comments Locked

140 Comments

View All Comments

  • TheinsanegamerN - Thursday, March 3, 2022 - link

    You could read the review and look at the benchmarks, that may help
  • SunMaster - Thursday, March 3, 2022 - link

    Todays games are nowhere near single threaded, even though there is a main thread. The reason alder lake does well is because it has several/many cores/threads clocked high performing well. both xbox and playstation have had multicore amds for a decade (since 2006 for PS, 2013 for xbox), which forced developers to focus on weaker threads rather than the old fashioned monolithic design.
  • SunMaster - Thursday, March 3, 2022 - link

    Can't edit my post it seems, but by multicore AMDS I meant 8 core.
  • GeoffreyA - Tuesday, March 8, 2022 - link

    I would say, ST is really the building block of multi-threading. Get that single brick strong, and the entire wall will be strong.
  • mode_13h - Wednesday, March 9, 2022 - link

    Ah, but it's not that simple. You need a good interconnect, cache, memory system, and clock/power-management.

    For instance, just look an Ampere Altra. Even though its single-thread performance is somewhat lacking, it shines at MT.
  • GeoffreyA - Wednesday, March 9, 2022 - link

    Indeed, the mortar and bond style are just as important as the brick.
  • mirancar - Thursday, March 3, 2022 - link

    most games have some sort of single thread bottleneck
    also web browser performance is highly affected by the single thread performance
    this is what most people do 99% of time on their computers, almost nobody is "rendering"
    more cores help up to a certain point, then it becomes useless. anything above 6C12T is usually completelly useless. single thread perf matters much more than 16 core 32 thread benchmark
  • Calin - Thursday, March 3, 2022 - link

    Office applications. Legacy software. Interpreted code (as was the Visual Basic for Applications). Compilation (C or C++) of a single file.
    There are many places where "single-core" performance counts, as - if your typical operation lasts only a few seconds you might not really care to optimize (and going parallel might not be easy, and might not even be possible for some problems).
  • jcb2121 - Thursday, March 3, 2022 - link

    Zwift
  • Wereweeb - Thursday, March 3, 2022 - link

    Virtually every application. Google "Amdahl's Law".

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now