Hope this transaltes into significantly better gamingperformance. Wonder how far we get on ram support, since Renoir APUs can du 2200-2300 infinity fabric I`m hoping Zen 3 can do atleast that.
RAM support is still something that AMD needs to work on. I still regularly encounter RAM that simply doesn't work with an XMP setting. I
know XMP is intel-optimised timings but when you get a common, affordable DDR4-3200 kit and it's not happy on Ryzen, your average Joe is going to be running it at 2133 JEDEC default and horrible 1066MHz Infinity Fabric, simply because the timings for XMP aren't quite there on the AMD platform.
Given that 95% of RAM kits available to consumers rely on XMP, it kind of sucks that the XMP settings still don't work for a non-trivial number of combinations. Sure, most TPU readers know to plug in the timings from the 1usmus DRAM calculator to get their AMD systems running at or close to the advertised speeds, but I'm willing to bet that most users aren't going to be interested in a 3-step process that involves manually inputting dozens of secondary and tertiary RAM timings buried in a completely different place under advanced BIOS settings for each motherboard.
Only this week I encountered a mainstream Gigabyte B550 board that failed to run XMP settings on two different RAM kits, and earlier during lockdown, Asus and Asrock B450 boards choked on a popular Kingston 3200 kit but were happy with (supposedly terrible for AMD) Corsair LPX and budget Patriot 3600 kits respectively.
AMD really needs XMP to "just work" and their AGESA firmware should really
really loosen timings by 25% or so on the memory training before giving up and running 3600MHz DDR4 at almost half it's rated speed.