Article 6ASSP Intel’s Core i5 is the best bargain in CPUs right now, but which should you get?

Intel’s Core i5 is the best bargain in CPUs right now, but which should you get?

by
Andrew Cunningham
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6ASSP)
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Enlarge / Intel's Core i5-13400. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

Fancy, expensive processors are fun, but for most people who just want to build a decent middle-of-the-road PC for gaming (and anything else), the best advice is usually to buy a Core i5 or Ryzen 5 for somewhere in the $200-$250 range and pair it with the fastest graphics card you can afford.

Intel's Core i5-13400 (and the graphics-less 13400F) caught our eye when Intel announced it because it was adding a cluster of four E-cores to the Core i5-12400, which was one of Intel's best mid-range desktop CPUs in years. E-cores don't matter much for games, but they can help when you're trying to run background tasks behind your game, and they can also provide a decent boost to heavily multithreaded CPU workloads like video encoding or CPU-based rendering.

This is nominally a review of the Core i5-13400, which is a good CPU and (when considered together with the cost of a motherboard and RAM) one of the better bargains you'll find if you're building a PC right now. The problem is that Intel sells a lot of very similar 12th- and 13th-generation Core i5 chips, and the prices are constantly bouncing around in that $160-$250 band. The one you should usually get depends on what you're doing and which one happens to be the cheapest at the moment you're buying.

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