But that's the thing: those chips might be affordable (as are the 1600AF and 2600 to varying degrees), but they don't compete well on performance compared to Intel's most recent budget offerings -
as I detailed in this post. It's clear AMD is relying on previous generations for their budget offerings, which was a viable tactic up until Intel started really competing again. Today, it isn't. They're still perfectly fine chips, but they are soundly beat at every price point by ADL. Here in Sweden, a 3400G barely costs less than a 12400F, which has two more cores and higher clocks+IPC, with the 3200G coming in just barely cheaper than a much faster 12100F. Intel has a massive IPC advantage over these chips,
and clock higher to boot. You don't get an iGPU with the F SKUs, so that's a downside. But overall, Intel wins this segment by a country mile currently.