Recommended System Requirements | ||
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Game | Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz | Athlon II X2 245e |
Cyberpunk 2077 | 285% | 397% |
Assassins Creed: Valhalla | 418% | 569% |
Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War | 273% | 382% |
Grand Theft Auto VI | 532% | 717% |
FIFA 21 | 260% | 365% |
Genshin Impact | 191% | 276% |
Far Cry 6 | 507% | 684% |
Hitman 3 | 418% | 569% |
Watch Dogs Legion | 418% | 569% |
World of Warcraft: Shadowlands | 498% | 673% |
In terms of overall gaming performance, the Intel Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz is noticeably better than the AMD Athlon II X2 245e when it comes to running the latest games. This also means it will be less likely to bottleneck more powerful GPUs, allowing them to achieve more of their gaming performance potential.
The Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz was released over three years more recently than the Athlon II X2, and so the Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz is likely to have far better levels of support, and will be much more optimized and ultimately superior to the Athlon II X2 when running the latest games.
The Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz and the Athlon II X2 both have 2 cores, and so are quite likely to struggle with the latest games, or at least bottleneck high-end graphics cards when running them. With a decent accompanying GPU, the Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz and the Athlon II X2 may still be able to run slightly older games fairly effectively.
More important for gaming than the number of cores and threads is the clock rate. Problematically, unless the two CPUs are from the same family, this can only serve as a general guide and nothing like an exact comparison, because the clock cycles per instruction (CPI) will vary so much.
The Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz and Athlon II X2 are not from the same family of CPUs, so their clock speeds are by no means directly comparable. Bear in mind, then, that while the Athlon II X2 has a 0.7 GHz faster frequency, this is not always an indicator that it will be superior in performance, despite frequency being crucial when trying to avoid GPU bottlenecking. In this case, however, the difference is enough that it possibly indicates the superiority of the .
Aside from the clock rate, the next-most important CPU features for PC game performance are L2 and L3 cache size. Faster than RAM, the more cache available, the more data that can be stored for lightning-fast retrieval. L1 Cache is not usually an issue anymore for gaming, with most high-end CPUs eking out about the same L1 performance, and L2 is more important than L3 - but L3 is still important if you want to reach the highest levels of performance. Bear in mind that although it is better to have a larger cache, the larger it is, the higher the latency, so a balance has to be struck.
The Athlon II X2 has a 1536 KB bigger L2 cache than the Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz, and although the Athlon II X2 does not appear to have an L3 cache, its larger L2 cache means that it wins out in this area.
The maximum Thermal Design Power is the power in Watts that the CPU will consume in the worst case scenario. The lithography is the semiconductor manufacturing technology being used to create the CPU - the smaller this is, the more transistors that can be fit into the CPU, and the closer the connections. For both the lithography and the TDP, it is the lower the better, because a lower number means a lower amount of power is necessary to run the CPU, and consequently a lower amount of heat is produced.
The Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz has a 10 Watt lower Maximum TDP than the Athlon II X2, and was created with a 23 nm smaller manufacturing technology. What this means is the Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz will consume slightly less power and consequently produce less heat, enabling more prolonged computational tasks with fewer adverse effects. This will lower your yearly electricity bill slightly, as well as prevent you from having to invest in extra cooling mechanisms (unless you overclock).
CPU Codename | Haswell | Regor | |||
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MoBo Socket | LGA 1150 | Socket AM2+ / AM3 | |||
Notebook CPU | no | no | |||
Release Date | 01 Jan 2014 | 10 May 2010 | |||
CPU Link | GD Link | GD Link | |||
Approved | ![]() | ![]() |
CPU Cores | 2 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 2 |
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CPU Threads | 2 | ![]() | vs | - | |
Clock Speed | 2.2 GHz | vs | ![]() | 2.9 GHz | |
Turbo Frequency | - | vs | - | ||
Max TDP | 35 W | ![]() | vs | 45 W | |
Lithography | 22 nm | ![]() | vs | 45 nm | |
Bit Width | 64 Bit | ![]() | vs | - | |
Virtualization Technology | no | vs | no | ||
Comparison |
L1 Cache Size | 128 KB | vs | ![]() | 256 KB | |
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L2 Cache Size | 512 KB | vs | ![]() | 2048 KB | |
L2 Cache Speed | - | vs | - | ||
L3 Cache Size | 2 MB | ![]() | vs | - | |
ECC Memory Support | no | vs | no | ||
Comparison |
Graphics | no | ||||
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Base GPU Frequency | - | vs | - | ||
Max GPU Frequency | - | vs | - | ||
DirectX | - | vs | - | ||
Displays Supported | - | vs | - | ||
Comparison |
Package Size | - | vs | - | ||
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Revision | - | vs | - | ||
PCIe Revision | - | vs | - | ||
PCIe Configurations | - | vs | - |
Performance Value | ![]() |
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Mini Review | Celeron G1820TE 2.2GHz is a budget dual Core Processor based on the 22nm Haswell architecture. It succeeds the Ivy Bridge Celeron G1610T Dual-Core 2.3GHz and against it, it remains within the same TDP and it offers superior CPU performance though the integrated graphics are still weak, very weak actually and doomed as soon as they start to run any 3D game. | The Athlon II series is based on the AMD K10 architecture and derived from the Phenom II series. However, unlike its Phenom siblings, it does not contain any L3 Cache. There are two Athlon II dies: the dual-core Regor die with 1 MB L2 Cache per core and the four-core Propus with 512 KB per core. Regor is a native dual-core design with lower TDP and additional L2 to offset the removal of L3 cache. The three core Rana is derived from the Propus quad-core design, with one core disabled. |
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