right, not even one mention of AMD which until very recently (if even now, I haven't seen the actual benchmarks) has been beating Intel's embedded offerings hands down for years.
In many cases the dedicated graphic is cheaper than integrated.
Intel Iris comes in more expensive processors which are not necessary for games. You might pay extra $300 on great CPU with integrated card, over slower CPU with dedicated GPU.
For example I saved $280 on my Dell XPS 13. It only has Intel HD Graphics 520 compared to Intel Iris Pro Graphics P580. CPU is same, except 100MHz clock.
I believe in industry parlance this is called an Advertorial (an advertisement dressed as an editorial). I didn't see a disclaimer though so either they are being dishonest with their audience or very tone deaf.
The NUC seems more like a Mac Mini than a real desktop PC and comparing it to a gaming PC is just strange. Despite their argument, yes, if you want to play games at optimal graphics and performance levels you DO still need a discrete GPU. Even game consoles (which require a fast data bus) have a discrete GPU despite their (usually) unified memory architecture.
Intel is one of their current advertisers/sponsors, but those articles are clearly marked with a banner and the "sponsored" tag. This article does not appear to be directly paid for.
Integrated offerings from Intel have always been substandard.
Claiming someone can make due with 30fps in a competitve fps shows a glaring level of ignorance from the author.
Can you play with 30fps? Yes. You can also play with a blindfold on and a hand tied behind your back. Given the choice, why play at a distinct, undeniable disadvantage?
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Intel Iris comes in more expensive processors which are not necessary for games. You might pay extra $300 on great CPU with integrated card, over slower CPU with dedicated GPU.
For example I saved $280 on my Dell XPS 13. It only has Intel HD Graphics 520 compared to Intel Iris Pro Graphics P580. CPU is same, except 100MHz clock.
Skull Canyon is overpriced anyway.
It may be the bare minimum required to play, but not usually an enjoyable experience; it ends up being a janky, stuttering mess.
Look I'm not in the 120hrz only way to play camp, but I really notice if I drop under 55-60, and it makes me frustrated.
This may be tied into the movement being much rougher at this point.
The NUC seems more like a Mac Mini than a real desktop PC and comparing it to a gaming PC is just strange. Despite their argument, yes, if you want to play games at optimal graphics and performance levels you DO still need a discrete GPU. Even game consoles (which require a fast data bus) have a discrete GPU despite their (usually) unified memory architecture.
http://motherboard.vice.com/tag/sponsored
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge%27s_law_of_headline...
Claiming someone can make due with 30fps in a competitve fps shows a glaring level of ignorance from the author.
Can you play with 30fps? Yes. You can also play with a blindfold on and a hand tied behind your back. Given the choice, why play at a distinct, undeniable disadvantage?