The problem in the comparison is that AMD transitioned relatively late to DDR4 back then, IIRC Intel transitioned in 2015 with LGA 1151, AMD did it only two years later.When AMD transitioned from DDR3 to DDR4 there were afaik, no CPUs with support for both memory standards, as AM3+ was DDR3 and AM4 was DDR4.
As such, it's not so strange the company did the same now when they transition to a new socket, CPU architecture and chipset, even if the latter isn't really relevant to memory support.
5700 is a Cezanne part, a 5700G with disabled graphics apparently, it comes with half the cache of the 5600, which is a Vermeer part, this could impact performance in the specific comparison (5600X vs 5700G should give you a rough idea, but we don't know just how much/little slower the 5600 will be in comparison to the 5600X).why would a 8c/16t zen 3 chip lose to a 6c/12t zen 3 chip at gaming?
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