ASUS will hold the world’s first overclocking competition where skill is the only factor on the 27 and 28 of November: The ASUS ROG OC Showdown. The competition takes place live at the ASUS booth in Sweden, during Dreamhack Winter 2009. The true unique characteristic of this competition is that the structure of the competition removes the element of variables such as a difference in quality of the CPU and GPU. The aim is to create an overclocking competition format that is truly viable as a sport, rather than a product exhibition.
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ASUS will hold the world’s first overclocking competition on the 27 and 28 of November, where skill is the only factor; ASUS ROG OC Showdown. The competition takes place live in ASUS booth at Dreamhack Winter 2009, in Sweden. The true unique characteristic of this competition is that the structure of it removes the element of variables, such as different quality CPU and GPU. The aim is to create an overclocking competition format that is truly viable as a sport, rather than a product exhibition.
The world renowned 3DMark-overclockers who will battle for the ROG Champion title:
The systems used in the competition features the most suited hardware and software for overclocking from ASUS, Intel, Microsoft and OCZ:
- Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate
- ASUS ROG Maximus III Formula
- ASUS EAH5870 (2 in CrossfireX)
- ASUS ROG Notebook for ROG Connect
- OCZ DD3 w/ Elpida Hyper, OCZ Vertex Turbo 120GB
- OCZ Z Series 1000W Gold Certified Modular
- Intel core i7 870
ASUS ROG Maximus III Series motherboards feature a revolutionary overclocking interface dubbed ROG Connect. ROG Connect enables users to link up to the embedded iROG controller via a separate PC – such as a notebook – connected via a USB cable. This allows users to tune the main system at a true hardware level in real-time, as well as view POST codes and hardware status readouts, on a notebook or netbook. Much like a race car engineer at the Formula 1 tracks.
2 setups... how is that the same quality hardware ?
Pure skills ?
Well, the only way to do that is 1 setup for all the participants, but that would more than likely make it a multi-day event.
Full mods and etc allowed, each person gets lets say 12 hours of continuous work with the setup.
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Some time ago on a local forum, after an oc contest in which luck decided
instead of skill, we also thought of this method. But during the discussion,
the weak spot also came up: if team 1 use such high settings (vcore, etc)
that damage the system, team 2 may have a hard time using setup 1...
45mins? That's way too short
Also
Quote:
The aim is to create an overclocking competition format that is truly viable as a sport, rather than a product exhibition.
[...]
- ASUS ROG Notebook for ROG Connect
ASUS ROG Maximus III Series motherboards feature a revolutionary overclocking interface dubbed ROG Connect. ROG Connect enables users to link up to the embedded iROG controller via a separate PC – such as a notebook – connected via a USB cable. This allows users to tune the main system at a true hardware level in real-time, as well as view POST codes and hardware status readouts, on a notebook or netbook. Much like a race car engineer at the Formula 1 tracks.
Oh the self-irony...
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This allows users to tune the main system at a true hardware level in real-time, as well as view POST codes and hardware status readouts, on a notebook or netbook. Much like a race car engineer at the Formula 1 tracks.
Sorry for again poking fun at the contest's main sponsor, but this also
warrants a laugh or two. Post codes? Post leds. Hw status readouts? Bios
and DMMs. Like a race car? Yeah, but a race car is a race car and not a
computer. With a computer you don't need another computer to see the
bios. Give me some of the stuff the marketing guys are smoking, please
Everybody except ME4ME was chosen by ASUS, as far as I know, by invitation. ME4ME "qualified" via Sweclockers, who collected people's overclocking "resumés". I obviously didn't submit my signature here.
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sounds interesting! reminds me of the first AOCM, german oc championship a few years ago...
there were 2 identical systems with similar clocking hw and people had xx minutes to get the highest spi scores out of it.
people should get the chance to have several runs imo, that removes luck/bad luck, and makes it more agressive, as people dont have to be over cautious about crashing the system. having several attempts of xx minutes would be perfect, maybe 3 attempts for each benchmark, that would be great... and let people chose what benchmark they want to try first, so somebody will try spi first, somebody will go for 3dmark first... that way there will be different strategies which will make it very interesting!
what about software? Thats a huge part of background prep to any serious OCer........can you take your own?
how is 3dmark P a measurement of skill? what kind of skill are you talking about?
The system will be running 45 min. There will be a period of time (atm 30min) dedicated for preparations for each person and system; CPU pot mount and post+win boot/driver check (not allowed to change any settings or start Vantage). This information didnt make it in to the press release but will be in the competition information kit and rules.
Also something that needs to be added is that no match will use the same two cpus or graphics cards as the match before. Each match will start with two fresh cpus and four fresh 5870.
You could say this is a trial and error competition in the hunt for a format that is interesting for people to watch live (even for people outside of forums like XS). That is also why there are so few people invited for the competition (that it is the first time we try this).
The system will be running 45 min. There will be a period of time (atm 30min) dedicated for preparations for each person and system; CPU pot mount and post+win boot/driver check (not allowed to change any settings or start Vantage). This information didnt make it in to the press release but will be in the competition information kit and rules.
Also something that needs to be added is that no match will use the same two cpus or graphics cards as the match before. Each match will start with two fresh cpus and four fresh 5870.
You could say this is a trial and error competition in the hunt for a format that is interesting for people to watch live (even for people outside of forums like XS). That is also why there are so few people invited for the competition.
Definitely, looks to be more interesting to watch from spectator point of view.
The system will be running 45 min. There will be a period of time (atm 30min) dedicated for preparations for each person and system; CPU pot mount and post+win boot/driver check (not allowed to change any settings or start Vantage). This information didnt make it in to the press release but will be in the competition information kit and rules.
Also something that needs to be added is that no match will use the same two cpus or graphics cards as the match before. Each match will start with two fresh cpus and four fresh 5870.
You could say this is a trial and error competition in the hunt for a format that is interesting for people to watch live (even for people outside of forums like XS). That is also why there are so few people invited for the competition (that it is the first time we try this).
mmmhhh idk... thatll end up with people being super cautious though... im not sure if this is the best approach, but it definately sounds a lot more interesting than the usual hw parade oc events we had lately
sounds interesting! reminds me of the first AOCM, german oc championship a few years ago...
there were 2 identical systems with similar clocking hw and people had xx minutes to get the highest spi scores out of it.
people should get the chance to have several runs imo, that removes luck/bad luck, and makes it more agressive, as people dont have to be over cautious about crashing the system. having several attempts of xx minutes would be perfect, maybe 3 attempts for each benchmark, that would be great... and let people chose what benchmark they want to try first, so somebody will try spi first, somebody will go for 3dmark first... that way there will be different strategies which will make it very interesting!
i hope asus will set up a live stream!
on first AOCM the systems were pretested to run within the same clock range (I think max. difference was 20MHZ) but the new idea of switching systems in the upcoming event sounds very intersting. But it sounds like this kind of competetion takes a large amount of time when every team needs to prepare each system. Also hoping for a live stream, that would be fantastic!
Let's see how it comes out and good luck to all
Wasnt Gigabyte the first to have a contest where skill was the only factor? The CPU speed was limited to 4GHz.
I've not fully read and absorbed all thed etails but all contests are good contests
I like the idea of ROG Connect. I started looking at a way of implementing a netbook-controlled LN2 setup....maybe this could be the first step towards that?
Definitely some issues there with things like software and time constraints, but I'm not sure there is a lot you can do for it. If people didn't rotate a bit it would be largely luck of the draw in terms of whether you get a CPU/GPU/etc that happens to be able to clock better than anyone else's. As for the software you do have to take the ability to cheat into account, and as it's a hardware competition I think that's fair.
Congrats to everyone chosen to enter, and good luck!
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