- Joined
- Nov 13, 2007
- Messages
- 10,845 (1.74/day)
- Location
- Austin Texas
System Name | stress-less |
---|---|
Processor | 9800X3D @ 5.42GHZ |
Motherboard | MSI PRO B650M-A Wifi |
Cooling | Thermalright Phantom Spirit EVO |
Memory | 64GB DDR5 6400 1:1 CL30-36-36-76 FCLK 2200 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 4090 FE |
Storage | 2TB WD SN850, 4TB WD SN850X |
Display(s) | Alienware 32" 4k 240hz OLED |
Case | Jonsbo Z20 |
Audio Device(s) | Yes |
Power Supply | Corsair SF750 |
Mouse | DeathadderV2 X Hyperspeed |
Keyboard | 65% HE Keyboard |
Software | Windows 11 |
Benchmark Scores | They're pretty good, nothing crazy. |
Guess what, genius? If the article says "it was overclocked", I'm gonna assume that it was overclocked.
And also, ASUS already had 2 x3D CPUs that blew that showed up on Reddit. There's a thread about some extremely shady behaviour there too:
https://www.reddit.com/r/Amd/comments/12uvcsm
But I'm sure I'll hear more sarcasm from you in about 10 seconds and it'll be all about AMD's fault and not ASUS or anything.
In my first post I explicitly state that I think the issue was with mobo makers with some responsibility from AMD due to communication issues (which they have always had). I don't buy the "brainded users" argument -- because it's a waste of time.
You can blame the users all you want (you're holding the iphone wrong! you didn't plug your dongle all the way in!) -- but if the hardware functions inconsistently across boards, or in extreme cases explodes with incorrect bios settings, there's no amount of user blaming that will make that go away. The "holding iphone wrong/dongle not all the way in" crowd has never been correct - that reasoning just doesn't work.