I would now like to get a new CPU, one of the 2 above.
I want to play Fortnite tournaments, but I don't know if streaming is important to be recognized, so I ask, do you have to stream and record or not?
One more thing: Ryzen 7 3700x, or Ryzen 5 5600x, which one is better?
5 5600X is better, newer generation and better for simply gaming
But only has 6 cores
Sufficient for gaming but video editing and rendering benefit from more cores.
8 cores are better for streaming. So the R7 3700X.
The Ryzen 5 5600X is more up-to-date, so I would take that.
Good side to compare CPUs: https://cpu.userbenchmark.com/...hmark.com/
https://cpu.userbenchmark.com/...om/Compare / AMD-Ryzen-7-3700X-vs-AMD-Ryzen-5-5600X / 4043vs4084
Here is the comparison between the two. The Ryzen 5 5600X does better, but is also 40 euro more expensive. But because of the topicality, I would still prefer it as I said.
But the other one has more cores… It depends on what is important to you. They are both good processors. Both will do their job.
The cores are not important for gaming?
6 cores are enough for streaming and gaming at the same time. Take the 5 5600x or wait for the 5 5800 without the x, it will probably be $ 100 cheaper (if it is like the previous one)
You probably want to play Fortnite in "Competetive mode" with the highest possible FPS in the CPU rather than in the graphics limit (low details).
Streaming could then, with the consent of your respective teams, at most be a kind of self-promotion with outstanding gameplay if you wanted to score points within the teams with excellent scoring and teamwork.
In the pure CPU limit (i.e. Relatively potent graphics card with low to minimal details @ 1080p) a Ryzen 5 - 5600X could bring you noticeably higher minimum FPS than an R7-3700X in this game.
Which graphics card and which CPU do you currently have?
Right now a 2400g and would like to buy an RTX 3060 ti
The 3060 Ti has an integrated video decoder and encoder as well as sufficient memory for alternative video coding via NVENC.
This should normally be sufficient for real-time video encoding with reduced quality in Fortnite during gameplay at 1080p @ low details on the main screen without too much processing load on the CPU for the encoding.
Fortnite would have to bring about 100 to 200 FPS on a GTX 1650-4G without streaming in 1080p in low details (for "Competetive").
An RTX 3060Ti should normally still have enough computing power and VRam left to encode in real time via NVENC for YT with in real time in 720p30 to 60 with adapted quality.
Then pack more RAM into the system along with a faster SSD.
The main thing is that your internet provides enough minimum upload (measured) for the game and parallel upstream.
In a possible "application video", potent teams only want to be able to understand how you "worked" in your previous teams as part of the respective communities for their benefit.
The Ryzen 5 5600x is better suited for gaming. But for Fortnite a cheaper / weaker processor would actually be sufficient.