Gaming Performance

So there’s going to be a lot of interest as to how this performs in our gaming tests, given the heritage of the processor. However, as previously mentioned, there are three things that are going to be against us here.

First is the driver stack. On a console the top to bottom software stack is optimized for both performance and ease of use. Game engine creators and game developers can both work to a fixed set of hardware, and take advantage of how close to the metal that software stack can be; this is why we get such great looking games as the lifecycle of a console continues. By contrast, our system has a straight forward version of Windows 10. It is as generic as it gets, which means optimizations will be on a much lower scale.

Second are the drivers themselves. There is no up-to-date solution here; our system shipped with beta versions of Adrenaline 17.12, which indicates we have December 2017 drivers. None of AMD’s regular driver packages will recognize this system as it uses a custom embedded processor. Some games will refuse to run because the drivers are so old. As a result we’re stuck in the services with a flat tire and no rescue in sight.

Third is the lack of additional eSRAM to help with memory bandwidth. The Xbox One and One S consoles had 32 MB of SRAM plus DDR3, while the Xbox One X had no SRAM but GDDR5. The A9-9820 APU has neither, instead relying on DDR3, and slow DDR3 at that. Memory bandwidth would appear to be a very obvious bottleneck in this regard, assuming that the graphics cores have plenty to work on.

Gaming Results

With all that being said, here are our numbers, and we’re putting them up against some of the very basic competition from our database. Perhaps the best modern comparison point will be to the Ryzen 5 2400G, however we also have a Ryzen V1605B here, which is a 12 W embedded Zen processor with Vega 8 graphics. On the Intel side, I have the Core i5-6500U, a mid-range Skylake mobile processor used in many mini-PCs. 

All of our games here are running at 720p minimum settings or lower, and the numbers will show you why.

Benchmark Results
AnandTech   Chuwi
Aerobox
Ryzen 5
2400G
Ryzen
V1605B
Core i5
6500U
Frames Per Second Averages
Civilization 6 480p Min 24.4 91.2 52.9 35.7
Final Fantasy XV 720p Med 20.1 26.8 14.2 35.4
World of Tanks 768p Min 144.7 223.8 141.1 165.8
Borderlands 3 360p VLow 31.3 70.8 42.9 29.0
Far Cry 5 360p Low 31.5 58.0 25.5 19.0
GTA 5 720p Low 37.8 83.0 52.9 32.8
95th Frame Time Percentiles (shown as FPS)
Civilization 6 480p Min 17.1 57.6 34.8 26.8
Final Fantasy XV 720p Med 17.1 22.6 11.3 6.8
World of Tanks 768p Min 40.2 130.7 84.5 115.2
Borderlands 3 360p VLow 24.2 55.2 32.7 22.3
Far Cry 5 360p Low 26.0 49.0 21.5 16.0
GTA 5 720p Low 25.4 56.6 38.3 23.3

In games like Civilization where the CPU matters, and in some of the other numbers, the poor performing Jaguar cores show how bad it can get – that low World of Tanks percentile comes into playm scoring only 40 FPS. If it weren’t for the CPU, the A9-9820 would be comfortably ahead of the i5-6500U in all of the tests. Games that didn’t run due to driver issues included F1 2019, Gears Tactics, and Red Dead Redemption.

From a personal experience perspective, I set myself up with a wired Xbox controller, and I very comfortably played several hours of Borderlands 3 single player at 720p Ultra Low settings. Frame rates hovered around the 30s, dipping into the 20s during firefights, or up in the 40s when walking through open spaces or in the towns.

Chuwi Aerobox: Under The Hood CPU Benchmarks, Power, Temperature, Noise
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  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, December 24, 2020 - link

    I'm actually quite embarrassed I never gave the Subor Z console a full review.
    I really should do that, despite the fact it's not available any more, even in China.
  • cosminmcm - Thursday, December 24, 2020 - link

    Do it!
  • Hifihedgehog - Tuesday, December 29, 2020 - link

    Yes!!!
  • brucethemoose - Friday, December 25, 2020 - link

    Y'all still have it!?

    Do it! I'd love to read it too!
  • Jorgp2 - Friday, December 25, 2020 - link

    That's what I was going do ask
  • eastcoast_pete - Friday, December 25, 2020 - link

    Please do! If nothing else, it's an interesting even unique setup, in some ways similar to Apple's M1. How so? Essentially an all-in-one design with capable graphics and unified memory, just like Apple's mobile SoC, but in x86/x64, and here with higher bandwidth memory (GDDR); would also love to know if and how the usually higher latencies of VRAM are affecting the CPU part of the performance.
    Similar to what others have written here: if Microsoft would sell their Series S or (better) X with Win 10 for maybe $100 more than the consoles, I would be very interested. That is, if running the CPU with VRAM doesn't work everyday computing tasks too badly.
  • loki1944 - Thursday, December 24, 2020 - link

    I think you mean Xbox one X, not S, for 2560 graphics cores.

    "All three had eight Jaguar cores, but varied in graphics cores, from 768 for the One and One S, up to 2560 in the Xbox One S"
  • Kangal - Thursday, December 24, 2020 - link

    Ian's also got some graphs wrong in the CPU Benchmark section. He forgot to upload the CineBench r20 Multi-Thread graph, and instead has uploaded the Single-Thread graph TWICE. Lol.
  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, December 24, 2020 - link

    R20 graph is replaced with Dwarf Fortress.
    All the other 80+ benchmark tests and data is in www.anandtech.com/bench - I didn't think padding out several pages with all of our data would be helpful.
  • Kangal - Saturday, December 26, 2020 - link

    No problems.
    I know to get the best idea of how a chipset performs, you need as many benchmarks as possible. I've just generally found CineBench to be a reliable way to gauge overall/rough performance. Thanks for the anandtech benchmark tabs, I do like the update, though needs more data points :D

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