To fulfill your request, I promise to randomly test the cooler with 10 different applications at 100 load and use an average of the max power consumption of the CPU... /s except that would be a bad joke. The ENTIRE POINT is the CPU loses frequency at max usage due to heat, something you haven't denied so why are we even talking. Use tower cooler or get bad results with the 11400f.
As for you, your comeback to me accusing you of cherry picking, is to cherry pick some more. I quoted the summary results of all tests. You are welcome to do that also. Like this (from the very article this thread is supposedly based on:
View attachment 195890
As for gaming, we know why the 11400f would be a better gaming option than the Ryzen 3600, and that is because Intel brought back high speed memory support to the 11400f with a B560 board. But don't be fooled if you build a budget system with slow memory. Still doesn't change the fact that people who buy the Ryzen 3600 apply LARGE OCs because it is easy to hit 4.4ghz, while people who buy the 10400f and 11400f are stuck with low clocks and MUCH WORSE relative performance than reviews suggest, especially in productivity, where the 3600 is already ahead without an OC.
Go read Techspot's article, see that I quoted it correctly, and come back here. I am NOT advocating the 3600 over the 11400f for gaming, I think it doesn't matter, but I also don't think the 3600 is somehow bad now. The 11400f isn't a solid improvement over the 10400f. The 5600x is way out ahead.
Intel Core i5-10400 vs. AMD Ryzen 5 3600 | TechSpot
I also honestly don't like Optimum Tech's reviews anymore. He did a summary page of the 11400f vs the 11600k. That's it. No summary vs. the 10400f (rather obvious choice) and not vs the Ryzen 3600. Not very useful. At least Hardware Unboxed will publish a summary page with all results. Expect that video tonight? Tomorrow? We'll see. So I quoted their result from the 10400f vs 3600 round up BECAUSE Techpowerup showed no improvements to gaming with the 11400f vs the 10400f.