I agree, but honestly, this processor perfects what the Core i7-5775C attempted to do seven years ago. If you look at it, the reasoning is sound. I owned one for a while and it was a pretty great CPU, shame my Z97 board died and they cost more than that platform is worth it, so I flipped the chip. If you look at what it is, a low-power, low-TDP quad-core with a small L3, doing what it does... funnily enough Ian made a test for Anandtech back in 2020 which covered many games still in the bench suite today, and these are the same games that show exceptional performance on the 5800X3D today. Was it worth it back then? I would argue no... is it worth it today? I think it still isn't, for the price being asked. But it is the way forward, and once the packaging technology advances enough we should see this deployed throughout a full stack, on both companies' offerings.
and Borderlands 3:
It is really worth reading, i'll leave the link here:
www.anandtech.com