Aces High is compiled with Visual Studio with no favor to any particular brand of CPU.
One more time. I get to deal with many customers everyday. The largest percentage of computer issues I deal with are centered around an AMD CPU based system. This is not a reflection on the CPU itself. It is a reflection on the mother board chipsets, although AMD did FUBAR the multi-core clock implementations which caused us no end of problems. Even the work around, supplied by AMD, so we could work reliably in a multi-core AMD environment is not stable with all of their CPU's.
If you want something stable and robust, Intel is the way to go.
i commend HTC for a really great game, and you for your endless patience in customer service.
having said that i see no way a core2duo E8500 (the subject here)would outperform the phenom ii 955be in playing Aces High 2.
i only have a b.s. electronics engineering degree and was in the cpu business (toshiba) for a while back then,
but have consistently followed microarchitecture development even when i quit the cpu business and now
about to practice law (intellectual property law, soon). so i know a good architecture when i review one.
even the independent per-core dynamic clocking of the older phenoms were not the fault of amd per se, but of the
less than intelligent windows scheduler(failing to bump up core speed, thread core-hopping)- a proper scheduler would have
assigned/pinned single threads to a single core while bumping core speed. windows scheduler however, did not implement it that way.
the per-core dynamic clocking feature was ahead of it's time hardware/microarchitecture-wise, and obviously software was late.
re: this purchase, the socket 775 platform is indeed end-of-life, and purchasing an EOL platform is a waste of money specially since newer
games/software(DX11) will efficiently make use of more than -two- cores. by end of next year, two cores will be the -new- single cores, if they arent already.