I don't know if you misspoke or don't understand even simple arithmetic, but the 6C-12T of Zen3 and the 12T of Alder lake (in any core configuration) are tuned to be basically equal.
For example, in Cinebench, Geekbench, Blender Benchmark, and 7-zip benchmarks, the 1235U (10C12T) and 5600U (6C12T), strictly limited to 15W, shows almost the same MT score, while the 12500H (12C16T) and 5800H (8C16T) show almost the same MT.
P.S.: 12500H can score comparable to 5600X even when turned down to 45W.
Each cases are based on actual report of CPU Package Power:
12500H (12C16T) @ 45W 11124 (GIGABYTE G5 entertainment mode)
12500H (12C16T) @ 95W 14435 (HP OMEN 16 performance mode)
5700X (8C16T) @ 76W 13802 (TDP65W, PPT76W)
5800X (8C16T) @ 130W 15228 (TDP105W, PPT142W)
Yeah I misspoke, meant #cores in the case of AMD.
Still though - 12T vs 12T; so whichever way it goes, on a straight bench
that can use every core thrown at it, E cores don't extract a real advantage. 'Tuned to meet' - rather, I'd say, E cores are tuned to meet a TDP target to ensure the chips don't straight up burn in hell. Of course, this happens on the AMD side too, except they're a lot smarter about it now.
But the fact still remains, that on an AMD CPU, you can use every core for every task without scheduling or other shenanigans. The fact is also that in any full-blown, unlimited load the Intels go straight into crazy land wrt power usage, while AMD's recent 7950X3D peaks at half TDP of a top- and even subtop- Intel part.
So that's where we see the real thing. In any
limited scenario, Intel can keep up. Remove limitations and the AMD parts deliver peak performance at fantastic efficiency, and the Intel parts start showing their true, excessive TDPs. And the difference it so seems, is mind blowing.
So the matchup is pretty much equal die space for similar performance, but twice the power usage at peak due to 'Efficient Cores'. Well played, Intel, well played indeed, gullible consumers buying the marketing. And why? So Intel can 'keep up'. Yeah, that Big little sure is a winner on the eternally rehashed Core CPUs, go go.
Efficiency chart is hilarious, even. Tell us again Intel didn't get stuck on quad, maybe hexacore since forever; the only parts that have any semblance of effiency in the current day are low core count parts. Apparently mix&match your old crap to make ends meet doesn't quite suffice against actual technological progress
Anyone thinking that e-cores are useless for gaming, is not thinking about every aspect of a gaming rig.
When I'm gaming with friends (100% of the time), I'm also:
- Talking on Discord
- Streaming on Discord
- Chrome's open
- Downloads running in the background (torrent)
- Possible game updates running on Steam/Origin/Epic ...
Sometimes they drag down gaming performance in isolated game benchmark reviews but who's doing that in real life?
Same goes for HT on AMD.
This review from Tweakers clearly shows how it matters in a real life scenario (especially compared to an i5 CPU without e-cores):
View attachment 285682
Source:
https://tweakers.net/reviews/10506/...-4-pijlsnel-of-bloedheet-games-streaming.html
You either have sufficient core count or you don't, its that simple, and it always has been. But then again, there's a lot of blundering going on @ Tweakers, be wary taking those reviews too seriously. They're Hardware.info level now - bottom barrel, up to and including straight up wrong results. I've had my share of experiences. Even prior to HWInfo invading to take over the abysmal review quality, they 'oopsied' on for example The Witcher 3 testing with Hairworks on. Yes you read it right. It took some heavy complaining from this person to correct that nonsense. Reviewers are liable to speak for the very thing they spoke against less than a month ago, etc. Its a mess.
Also, interesting that you do full blown downloads in background while gaming, that'll be some enjoyable ping!