LTT Forums,
Hey guys, Zera here. I'm a big time fan and long time lurker, first time poster. First, a little about me (FYI, if you are just interested in answering the question, skip to the second paragraph), I'm an ex-military member in the United States and currently attending the University of Arkansas for a Bachelor's in IT-Networking. I'm a part time content creator, youtuber, streamer and big time gamer. My current set up is a single 980 Ti, a 4790k air cooled with an aftermarket heat sink from Noctua, all Razer peripherals, Klipsch 2.1 speakers and lastly I run 3 ASUS 1080p monitors. This setup has done me wonders over the past few years, but I'm looking to up the ante when the 1080 Ti comes out and I was hoping to bounce some ideas off you guys. So, without further adieu, let's get right to it!
So my next build I'm already starting to piece together. As for the processor, I am waiting to see how Ryzen does; however, I will be honest, I don't expect it to out do Intel. I hope it does, but the techie in me is pretty much convinced Intel's got something up it's sleeve specifically for Ryzen and once AMD releases their new "flagship processor," Intel's going to drop something that'll essentially negate AMD's meager attempt at crawling out of it's 20% hole in market shares. That being said, I'm leaning more towards something similar to the 7700k with fewer cores but with better single core performance than that of it's Broadwell-E cousins.
As for the Graphics, you can already guess where I'm leaning. I most likely won't pick up the 1080 Ti when it initially comes out, I'll most likely wait a month or two so other manufacturers can get their hands on these cards and add their own custom heat sinks or OC them to higher base clock speeds. That being said, what I'm looking to get out of it would be 8k Display for viewing video and web browsing, while maintaining 4k resolutions for gaming at roughly 60-70 fps. The monitor I will be utilizing for this build will be none other than that Philips 43" 4k UHD IPS Panel Monitor. All the reviews on this thing say it's glorious and with only a 5 ms response time, it brings everything I need to the table. It doesn't support either G-Sync or Free Sync; however, with the fact that I will only be running a single card at this particular juncture, I don't think I'll be able to get more than 60-70 fps out of 4k gaming experience to begin with (to be honest, at ultra settings on everything I only expect a realistic 35-55 fps at any one point).
So, here's my issue, with HDMI 2.1 being confirmed to handle speeds and connections of up to 8k at 60 hertz and the original 1080 being able to handle a maximum resolution of up to 8k (yes I know most games don't support it, but I wouldn't game at 8k anyway due to the sheer loss in frames). Do I simply invest in the 1080 Ti, HDMI 2.1 cables across the board and the Philips 43" UHD monitor and simply wait on an 8k display? Because to be honest, 8k doesn't exist right now for monitors in the commercial market. And I'm not sacrifices tens of thousands of dollars on a TV that's 8k due to the inherit input lag issues from a Television as compared to a dedicated Computer Monitor. Your thoughts gentlemen?