Really, what hurt AMD most is releasing new CPUs before the new 800-series boards are ready. Reviewers would have been a lot more forgiving of the lacklustre Zen 5 performance uplift if paired with a board with better features, i.e. new CPU + new board together would've be a more compelling launch than new CPU only.
... except for the fact that the only new thing on the 800-series boards is USB4, which was intended to be on the Zen 4/600-series boards at launch, but ASmedia has taken over 2 years to get right (a lot of which can be blamed on Intel's poor specs, but still). Feature stagnation (= PCIe lane counts) is what will kill AM5.
Unless we're seeing budget 3D models in the future, AMD would have nothing to compete with in the budget segment, even if that's not a first.
AMD's "strategy" for budget CPUs seems to be AM4, which is just plain stupid because it's prevented them from focusing all-in on AM5 and making that product line an attractive option across all price segments. Plus they have to maintain 2 microcode branches instead of 1, two sets of chipset drivers, two RMA channels, two production lines, ...
No Im saying that with TDP boost, more aggressive clocking, and working out of the bugs with windows fixes it will get to ~10%, add X3D to that... you've got yourself a nice chip.
AMD Fine Win strikes again! Don't buy the product that's reviewed, buy a hypothetical future product that may or may not ever perform at the levels claimed by a single AMD fanboy huffing copium!
Speculation, I haven't seen any reason as to why games or any other processes need elevated privileges for them to get more performance on AMD
It's not speculation, it's AMD fanboy copium.