![]() ![]() Even after realizing his mistake, they decided to keep calling him Nevil. Nevil: Original name was "holynevil" ("Holy 'n' Evil") which Womble read as "Holy Nevil".Possibly the most popular female in the series (though not the only one), don't let the sultry voice and sexy accent fool you tough, as she's a top CS:GO player and crack shot with any pistol. Nep: Austrian singer, gamer, not streamer, and all around seductress.Edberg: Mexican (according to Cyanide he's actually a Paraguayan-born Swedish national) streamer and singer, also the closest thing ZF has to a Straight Man, usually raging at Soviet's incompetence and Cyanide's antics, when he's not being a Troll himself.Singaporean Indian, currently residing in the UK. Cyanide: Often referred to as "Cy", he is Soviet's oldest and most frequent collaborator (they're not friends, though) and usually the most troublesome, who will usually steal the scene by saving your life in the most self-aggrandizing way or shooting you in the back for kicks, depending on his mood.His most prominent clanmates/collaborators include: Those often provide the source material for later videos. While Womble was never a particularly prolific video creator, by 2018 his time was more often spent with live streams on on his Twitch channel. They consist of a collection of funny moments, zany situations and the all-around chaos that comes naturally when a group of dorky and irreverent friends play together, complemented by his addition of subtitles and occasional Cutaway Gags that are edited in afterwards for comedic effect. The videos are generally labelled " Random (insert-game-here) Bullshittery". ![]() Womble is usually joined by some regular friends and teammates, most of them being fellow members of the online gaming clan ZF (pronounced the British way "Zed-Ef", standing for "Zero Fucks"). Sure, it takes a few seconds to apply filters, but the user interface and particularly the brushes respond instantly to inputs.SovietWomble is a British streamer and self-proclaimed YouTube Phenomenon who is most known for his Bullshittery series, monthly videos that chronicle the misadventures of Womble and his friends as they attempt to play different games together, ( for some definition of "together"). Even though an older device such as the Wacom Mobile Studio Pro 13 equipped with an Intel Core i7-6567U (two Skylake cores) trailed far behind newer systems with a score of 97, Affinity Photo 2 remained usable even when processing larger images. Both chips performed around 43 and 50 per cent better than the Core i7-12700H and Apple M2 respectively. Unsurprisingly, the Apple M1 Pro and M1 Max delivered around the same level of performance because they practically share the same CPU configuration. The Intel Core i7-12700H (14 cores) performed 13 per cent better than the Core i9-11900K (8 cores) – this is roughly the same margin you would expect to see in Cinebench R23 and Geekbench 5. In any case, Affinity Photo 2 benefits from higher CPU core counts. That is to say, the results do not reflect any possible performance limitations caused by inadequate cooling under sustained load. Even the power-efficient Apple M1 in the iPad Pro managed to slightly outperform the desktop processor Intel Core i9-11900K, despite the fact that the Intel CPU is ahead of the M1 in benchmarks such as Cinebench R23 and Geekbench 5 in terms of both single- and multi-core performance.Īt this point, we need to emphasise that each run of the benchmark in Affinity Photo 2 only lasts a few seconds. When it comes to processor performance, Affinity Photo 2 demonstrates a similarly high level of optimisation for Apple's platform. CPU benchmarks: Apple M1 beats Intel Core i9-11900K ![]()
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