The scope of the video is games. Nothing weird or biased about that. If you only play games, why care about compiling code or rendering or whatever?
I am not watching the whole 19 minute video but I agree with Frick.
AS LONG AS the review makes it clear from the very beginning the review has a narrow focus
AND both products are being
marketed to perform the same tasks in the same performance category, then the comparison is fair. But it is that marketing aspect that bothers me here.
Would you compare a Ford F150 Raptor "truck" with a BMW M3 "sedan" and declare the F150 best because the BMW won't haul a 10,000lb trailer? Or declare the BMW best because the truck won't do 150MPH? Of course not. Why? Because they are not marketed as competing products.
You could compromise and go with a SUV - vehicles designed to (more or less) meet the demands of both worlds, sedans and trucks. But when you compromise, there NEVER is the case where the product is best in every category. That's why it is called a compromise. And in this case, you probably should be comparing the BMW X6 SUV with the Lincoln Aviator SUV, and not the BMW sedan with the Ford truck (for those unaware, Lincoln is Ford's luxury line, like Lexus is to Toyota, Acura to Honda).
If you look at the
AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D home page, it is all about gaming. Not one mention of any other tasks. Just gaming. That's fine! I'm okay with that.
For sure, the
Intel Core i9 page includes significant marketing hype about gaming too - no denying that. But it also mentions "creating", "streaming" and "everyday user tasks". In other words, it is NOT being marketed just for gaming. That is significant.
To me, the AMD is being marketed as a formula 1 race car, designed to go as fast as possible on the track, while the Intel is being marketed as a fast SUV. Apples and oranges. Both fruit, yes. But competing products?
OF COURSE, Intel and AMD are competitors, just as Ford and BMW are competitors, as well as the apple and orange farmers are competitors. Each want us to spend our money on their products. But are the Ryzen 7 7800X3D and the Intel Core i9 14900K being
marketed as competing products?
Is the Ford 150 being marketed as a competing product to the BMW sedan or SUV?
The Ford F150, Chevy Silverado 1500, and RAM 1500 are all marketed by their respective manufacturers as competing products. And so it makes total sense to compare them against each other as competing products.
But who is claiming these two CPUs are competing products? Intel and AMD? Not really. It is the respective fanboys, bloggers and reviewers looking to get likes and followers, and wannabe journalists in the IT media.
So okay,
the reviewer makes it clear, they are talking about gaming. Great! But is the review biased as Snoopy's cousin wonders?
Well, if you look at the video just 9 seconds in, in the lower left corner, check out the names of the products they are reviewing. I will illustrate here - exaggerating to emphasis my point just in case it is not as obvious to you as it was to me.
AMD RYZEN 7 7800X3D
vs
INTEL Core i9-14900K
Now why do that? From a marketing perspective, the objective is clear - you want the AMD to stand out. But in terms of presenting an unbiased, objective review? Well, you can come to your own conclusions.