That plus of GRAMallows you to burst the machine a llittle bit more in video edition and, in games, get textures at ultra. About the graphic card, I also had read that is not a huge diference between the 55 but in that case you can get 8 GB with the 5500 but not with the 5300 so I was decided for the 5500 with 8 GB. I had read that is not a big difference between the i9 9980HK and 9880H processors (aka 2.4GHz and 2.3 GHz respectively) so I was decided for 9880H. The fans get a little bit loudy but is not a problem for me because the sound system I have. In my experience (that is similar as your needs) I can play very well games like RDR2 putting the configuration between the middle and high points getting the game totally playable (aroung 60 FPS). It is clear that if you buy a high spec machine, you will reduce the probability of throttling or at least you will game with a little better performance most of the games. reduce resolution, textures quality and so on) and that depends on the game. What you can to do if you experience throttling (or low FPS) is reduce the game configs (eg. If somebody experience throttling they do not have anything to do because the machine specs don't vary. Well, so you don't exposed your question properly. This is probably the direction I'm going to go, I'm going to pickup at Razor Core X with either a 5700x or RTX card for Windows 10 Only. Although I can't imagine if you were in say Red Dead Redemption 2, the fans would be any less loud than with the i9 5500m version.Īlso, you DO have the option of using an eGPU if you'll be gaming mostly in one place, and then if you do travel you can still game. Obviously if you have both the im, it's going to draw more power and create more heat, but how much more over the im I can't say. This said.I'm not entirely sure how better off the base model is compared to the im in terms of fan speeds. But HOLY! Fan Noise City! I wear over the ear headphones, Kingston Hyper-X Cloud, and so I don't really hear the noise, but there is no way anyone could stand that noise during gaming, let alone even hear the game properly! On the bright side, the 16" wasn't getting that hot, so I guess the fans are dissipating the heat. I was able to crank all the settings, less Ultra Textures (Since it needs more than 4GB VRam) and it ran buttery smooth. I picked up the i9, 5500m 4GB model this week and have Windows 10 installed on Bootcamp for gaming, 99% Rainbow Six Siege. If your primary use is going to be work with gaming an afterthought, I'd first ask if the base model will suffice CPU, Ram and Graphics wise. Please feel free to vote and share your owner experience in this thread. So the question for all 2019 16-inch MBP owners: which spec would you recommend in terms of performance/stability ratio for gaming on Bootcamp? I've read this thread recently and found several reports that at least some of 2019 16-inch MBP CPU/GPU combinations throttle and don't work well from the box, and now I'm curious which spec should I buy. Now I just wish that my new MBP would be performant and work well without throttling and precarious software mumba-jumba. Had to do a lot of research and tried many solutions, which finally led to maxing fans speed with Macs Fan Control, fixing CPU frequencies to certain values and slightly overclocking GPU to fixed values on every Bootcamp startup. I've run into a lot of issues with throttling and performance stability with my old 2015 15-inch MBP with discrete graphics on Bootcamp. Yeah, I know Mac isn't for gaming, but in terms of mobility it's the best choice for me atm. I will use it primarily for work, but also would like to game on it. I want to buy a new 2019 16-inch MBP in a few months.
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