Stock issues have greatly improved in the US for the 5600X. I posted that link above to AMD's site and it was available from when I posted it to about midnight last night at least. The
5800X is still in stock.
Even Amazon currently has the 5600X (yes, at $299):
https://www.amazon.com/AMD-Ryzen-5600X-12-Thread-Processor/dp/B08166SLDF/
A month ago stock was terrible, but that's not the case anymore.
And to perfectly illustrate my point, it's already back up to $355 less than a mere 14 hours later with scalpers who know they can make a clean $50 on every unit!
No. We both know this is false, and we both know that you have no source to back up this hunch. Zen 3 is the biggest architectural change since the introduction of the first generation, this is a well know fact.
I see this claim coming back every now and then, but I never see any proof of it.
You're misinterpreting what I wrote. I did NOT say that the
only difference was the removal of the CCX, I said the
biggest difference. It's not even hard to see either - TechPowerUp's own reviews show a 5800X > 3800XT = 19.0% IPC increase, whilst the 5900X > 3900XT = 14.6% increase. Despite the long laundry-list of architectural changes, 25% of all Zen3's IPC gains come from unifying the CCD. If you compare IPC uplift of single CCD (5800X) vs dual CCD (5900X) then you get 19.0/14.6 = 30% improvement. That's a 30% improvement the 5800X gets that the 5900X doesn't.
Let's just be super clear here as you seem readily-willing to misconstrue what I say for the sake of making an argument: The 5900X is still a fantastic chip with huge IPC gains over the 3900X/XT. It's just not
as much of a leap forwards over the previous generation as the 5800X is over the 3800X/XT. Given the smaller performance gap between the 5900X and the 3900X/XT, and then considering the discounts/availability of the the 3900X against the scalping/unavailabilty of the 5900X, it's not as much of a concern to most people interested in a 12-core CPU. Even if you find a 5900X at MSRP, the discounts on a 3900X make it better performance/$ in most tests.
Don't be sad. There are plenty of 5600X available on several countries, maybe not just where you live. You don't seem to keen on proving your point either, unlike medi01.
Just because it's out of stock at some places, I'd guess north america for instance, it doesn't have to be that everywhere.
Whilst that's true, I read and watch English-speaking channels and sites. That means US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, India, South Africa. The top-5 tech streamers covering US, Canada, UK, and Australia have all realeased multiple videos in the last week mentioning stock shortages (presumably in those regions) and the same goes for websites and forums where you will have no problem finding up-to-date threads whining about availability and equally the existence of threads proclaiming that
retailer X has Zen3 in stock right now. None of those threads would exist in abundance if there wasn't a widespread problem.
For what it's worth, I'm in the UK and have had no problem acquiring a 5800X and eight 5900X CPUs at close to MSRP in the last four weeks, though availability of the 5900X is terrible, I had to pull strings with my B2B account manager at the UK's largest tech etailer. That same site just had "call for pricing" on the 5900X for business accounts and "coming soon" for consumer logins.
Show us how it's done!
I did, days ago, in the post that seems to have triggered you.
CamelCamelCamel - you can check various regions and with the exception of Germany they all look either bad or terrible
today for stocks/scalping:
You can also see the price history and despite Germany having stocks of some Zen3 models for two months now, Everywhere else is still above MSRP, sometimes by ridiculous amounts because any stock that hits the market gets instantly scalped.