- Joined
- Jul 13, 2016
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Processor | Ryzen 7800X3D |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASRock X670E Taichi |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 Chromax |
Memory | 32GB DDR5 6000 CL30 |
Video Card(s) | MSI RTX 4090 Trio |
Storage | Too much |
Display(s) | Acer Predator XB3 27" 240 Hz |
Case | Thermaltake Core X9 |
Audio Device(s) | Topping DX5, DCA Aeon II |
Power Supply | Seasonic Prime Titanium 850w |
Mouse | G305 |
Keyboard | Wooting HE60 |
VR HMD | Valve Index |
Software | Win 10 |
I read it and it's really not hard to understand the article but the part about not losing clocks is pure speculation. Turns out they were incorrect anyway and looking at the boost clocks between 9700x and 9800X3D, there's still a hit to clocks albeit less than before.
1) That's a different leak, not a fact as you seem to be implying
2) You are assuming that the 9800X3D will be clocked as high as the 9950X3D. If they can increase the clocks on the new X3D, they may choose to further segment by having higher clocks on the higher end part.
Mind you either way the frequency is increasing as compared to prior gen X3D parts so relative to past X3D parts any performance different as a result of the X3D cache will have changed this generation.
So yeah, adding L3 to both CCD's would reduce productivity for a minor gain in performance. What's worse is that it'll increase performance for unwanted situations which they would want to mitigate through drivers anyway because ideally you want the gaming cores to be pinned to one CCD. In situations where it jumps to another, it won't match the 9800X3D's performance simply because of the latency incurred to jump to the other CCD.
So you're looking at a slight benefit for games in edge cases and a slight hit to productivity for a CPU that costs more. Pretty sure AMD said the same during 7950X3D launch when they did the math. Whether that changes remains to be seen
Ok now I understand. You read the article, you just don't know what you are talking about / can't understand it.
"slight benefit for games in edge cases"?
Clearly you are unaware that the 7950X3D was 14% faster on average than the 7950X in games.
Even if there were 0 frequency improvements to the 9950X3D, it would mirror that performance increase at the very least.
In the CPU world that isn't slight, it's what you typically get with a new architecture.
You also don't seem to understand what edge cases are either, X3D's boost is not only to edge cases. A wide array of games benefit from X3D. You seem to be arguing against X3D in general which is just dumb. Every benchmark out there disproves you.
Also, since when is an increase in performance "unwanted"? Utter nonsense.
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