Yes, but like AMD has explained, Ryzen Master doesn't report that. It reports the best core based on it's properties at factory, but due nature of how Windows scheduling works, it isn't necessarily the best core in Windows (because really Windows wants 2 best cores, not just one, since it passes the single threaded load between 2 cores for power management etc) - CPPC2 reports the best 2 cores within same CCX, because 2 best cores overall could be in 2 different CCXs which would hurt performance when the thread is thrown around. For the same reason 3rd and 4th best cores are always marked on the same CCX as the best 2 even if they're actually the worst 2 cores on the CPU, it's better for performance to fill one CCX before spilling on to the other CCX.