Intel N200 vs AMD Athlon II X3 450

Compare Intel 4 core CPU vs AMD 3 core processor, specs and benchmark score. Which is the better CPU for gaming?

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Benchmark Score

Overall Score

A combined score of all workloads

1175 points
1219 points
3% slightly better overall score

Gaming Score

The raw gaming performance with a fast GPU

2063 points
2398 points
16% slightly better gaming score

Multitasking Score

Performance in workloads using up to 8 cores

930 points
2% slightly better multitasking score
908 points

Heavy Workload Score

Performance in workloads using up to 16 cores

904 points
3% slightly better heavy workload score
872 points

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Specifications

Cores

Number of physical processing units

4
33% slightly more cores
3

Threads

Number of logical processing units

4
33% slightly more threads
3

Clock Speed

Base frequency at which the chip operates

1 GHz
3.2 GHz
220% significantly higher clock speed

L2 Cache

Secondary embedded memory, slower than L1 cache

2 MiB
33% slightly more L2 cache
1.5 MiB

Other details

Rank

Ranking in the hardwareDB database

920th of 1,107
910th of 1,107

N200 vs Athlon II X3 450 comparison

Our benchmark analysis concludes that the Athlon II X3 450 performs better than the N200. Furthermore, our gaming benchmark shows that it also outperforms the N200 in all gaming tests too.

When comparing core counts for these CPUs, we notice that the N200 has slightly more cores with 4 cores compared to the Athlon II X3 450 that has 3 cores. It also has more threads than the Athlon II X3 450. These CPUs have different clock speeds. Indeed, the Athlon II X3 450 has a significantly higher clock speed compared to the N200. In terms of cache, the N200 has slightly more L2 cache when compared to the Athlon II X3 450

The more cores a CPU has, the better the overall performance will be in parallel workloads such as multitasking. Many CPUs have more threads than cores, this means that each physical core is split into multiple logical cores, making them more efficient. For instance, the N200 has the same number of threads as cores. This means the the CPU does not support hyperthreading.

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