Quick Answer
For MMO and live-service games, LGA 1851 is Intel's current socket for Core Ultra (Series 2) chips, while LGA 1700 carries the older 12th-to-14th Gen Core CPUs that still offer strong value. LGA 1851 adds more PCIe lanes and newer platform features but a fresh CPU lineup; LGA 1700 has mature, well-priced parts. For a new build, weigh current pricing over the socket name.
What Separates the Two Sockets
LGA 1851 is the home of Intel's Core Ultra 200S desktop chips, bringing a new tile-based design, more native PCIe lanes and updated connectivity. LGA 1700 hosted three generations (12th, 13th and 14th Gen Core) and has a deep catalogue of CPUs and boards at every price point.
For populated zones in FFXIV, Path of Exile 2, Destiny 2 and World of Warcraft where streaming and patch sizes pile up, raw gaming performance between a good 14th Gen chip and a current Core Ultra part is close in many titles, with the newer platform leaning on efficiency and features. The decision often comes down to the exact CPU price and board cost at Evetech on the day.
Picking a Platform in SA
LGA 1700 builds can be very cost-effective: a Core i5 with a B760 board and DDR5 still makes a capable %s machine, often for less than the newest socket. Combos at Evetech span a wide range, with mainstream Intel CPU-plus-board pairings commonly landing around R6,500-R11,000.
LGA 1851 suits buyers who want the latest Intel platform and its extra lanes for future SSDs and devices. For a MMO and live-service games build, check whether that upgrade path and the extra features justify the premium for your needs.
FAQ
Is LGA 1700 still worth buying in SA?
Yes. LGA 1700 CPUs like a Core i5-14600K remain strong for MMO and live-service games and are often keenly priced thanks to mature stock. You lose the newest socket's features, but the gaming experience is very close for the money.
Does LGA 1851 give a big gaming boost over LGA 1700?
Not dramatically in pure frame rates; the current Core Ultra desktop chips focus on efficiency and platform features more than raw gaming leads. LGA 1851's advantage is being the current, more upgradeable Intel socket.
Which Intel socket should I pick for a long-term build?
If you value the latest platform features and more PCIe lanes for future storage, LGA 1851. If you want maximum value now and care most about frame rates per rand, a well-priced LGA 1700 combo still delivers.
Buyer Tip
the full combo, not the socket: compare a specific LGA 1851 CPU-and-board bundle against an LGA 1700 one at Evetech, since the cheaper complete platform usually wins for gaming value.