AMD can also add 2 more chiplets for a total of 32 cores and increase TDP up to 300W.Well it is a 12900K with higher clocks, more cache and architectural tweaks.
AMD is going to suffer on marketing, becuase they are releasing the same processors just in Zen 4 form, but Intel has increased core counts effectively pushing everything up a tier. 7600X will be expected to compete against 13600K but now is a lower end cpu same with 7700X vs 13700K. And Intel is going to keep increasing e-core counts with Arrow Lake hitting 40 IIRC. AMD does not appear to have an answer to this unless they also go hybrid in Zen 5 and use Bergamo cores as e-cores. AMD luckily does have v-cache coming though.
While I have no real interest in Raptor Lake, and will repalce my old Zen 1700X system with a 7900X (hopefully with v-cache) come Arrow Lake I might be a lot more inclined to go that way if AMD keeps to current core counts. No way a regular 16 core 8950X would compete with a 32 core (8P + 24 E) 14900K say. There are rumours AMD is going hybrid with Zen 5 and IMO they have no other option. I don't having 32 full cores is wise in the desktop market especially from power use terms.
I really like your idea:I think they should do big, medium, little.
4 big superfast cores, 4 medium duty all round cores, 8 little slow cores.
Then have a robust ability to pin software threads to particular core types.
BIG = Zen 5
MEDium = best of Zen 3/3+/4
little = Zen 2
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