It's not wishful thinking to imagine Zen 2 making Intel quite uncomfortable. It won't beat the best Intel has but it will close the gap considerably. And if AMD keeps the cost down, it'll be a killer CPU.
I've seen this assertion a few times (not just on these forums mind) but if we take the two rumours of Zen 2's 8-core flagship - 4.5Ghz boost clock engineering sample and 13% IPC boost (the latter of which has been corroborated with another separate leak) - and combine it with the expected launch anywhere between March and August 2019, I can't see this not being the fastest 8-core on the market for some time.
This is because Intel's best consumer CPU unquestionably remains the 9900K during its release window (14nm+++++ refresh of 9900K won't come before a 3700X releases, their 10nm is Q4 at the earliest). So you think a 7nm Ryzen 3700X with 13% higher IPC, with a boost clock estimate of around 4.8Ghz, and with a further improved memory controller, won't beat the hot and power hungry 9900K? Someone do the maths. I think the rumours we have so far would see flagship Ryzen 3000-series CPUs sail right past Intel's 9900K in both gaming and multi-threaded workloads.
So it only renders 140 FPS instead of 150FPS on your 60hz monitor? On 99% of systems, the GPU will be the limiting factor, even on 144hz monitors. If ryzen is indeed lagging "ever so slightly" behind intel for half the cost, seems like a great chip.
What are your specific issues? Where are you seeing problems? Saying "well its slower in gaming" doesnt really help, because outside of a select few titles, there is no appreciable difference btween a ryzen and intel rig.
Yes this is another thing I keep seeing. People saying 8700K is best for gaming and 'Ryzen isn't as good' whilst not realising that the actual gap at worst case scenario for that CPU (1080p gaming benches) it's only......7% behind on average, according to yours truly TPU. Even worse than that is when people repeat this spiel and have cards on the level of a GTX 1080 and lower (almost 99% of gamers) and don't realise this small gaming performance gap starts to disappear completely as you go down the stack from a GTX 1080. I mean the performance gap on average if you're gaming with a 1080 @ 1080p res would be within the margin of error already let alone with all the cards slower than that.