I admit I still feel it's a bit of a "cheat". As in, technically, if the machine requires Win10 to fully support all hardware functions then using an OS which doesn't fully support all hardware functions (like Win7 or even WinXP) is not a properly representative or meaningful benchmark. Almost misleading.
I do understand overclockers controlling all the parameters and aligning every possible factor to achieve their results, streamlining everything possible, focussing only on aspects that improve performance and discarding aspects which don't, extreme results require extreme approaches. And we all know that software bloat is the overwhelming contributor of underwhelming performance.
And consumers aren't seriously intended to run their desktops on LN2 cooling anyhow, so it's already a special context.
Some overclock records have been made on modded firmware, sometimes provided by the OEM, sometimes custom, which is also not seriously intended (or even available) for consumers to use on their systems.
But it still somehow kinda seems like a "cheat". Perhaps they should also voltmod the mobos, rewire all the VRM hardware, replace it with different VRM hardware entirely, solder on modified processor sockets, use off-board processing to augment the chipset, etc? Overclocking is already out of spec (overspec) by definition. But how much can you really change the platform configuration before it's not even the "same" system, where to draw the line?
I guess I'd feel less "cheated" if the line was drawn closer to where the end-user would actually use (and overclock) his own components. It's a given that people who buy SKL/KBL/etc need to run Win10 to make full use of the their new tech, so it should be given that achieving 6.1GHz under Win7 (or, hypothetically, 10GHz under MSDOS 6.22) is not a "real" measure of maximal motherboard/processor capabilities.
All that being said, I vote for some linux-based overclocking competition. Somebody's gotta be willing to kickstart it.
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