can you define what "typical AMD pricing" is? and why you have a problem with it?
After you explain why you are so certain I have a problem with it.
seems like in 2025 for these insane prices we should have now more cores and threads, this does seem like what Intel was doing.
But I'm probably the only one that cares about pricing vs performance in 2025, everyone just jumped off this ship long ago
AMD started the whole "More Cores" thing. Intel started the "More Threads" thing.
(boring part)Intel introduced HyperThreading, so more threads per core. AMD moved on offering more cores, first with Athlon x2, then with Phenom x4 and later with Phenom x6. But Intel was offering more threads(and performance) by that time, so at AMD, not having a HyperThreading equivalent and thinking it will be a better idea of marketing cores vs threads, they created Bulldozer. Intel had a manufacturing advantage back then, meaning it was probably difficult for AMD to offer 8 full cores. So Bulldozer had something(modules) like 4x1.5 cores, that AMD was pushing as 4x2=8 cores. But it failed.
AMD made a come back with Zen, offering at the same time twice as many cores and twice as many threads compared to Intel. This time it worked, because Zen had a respectable IPC. Intel fell behind in manufacturing, trying to add full cores was a disaster (10th gen). So they remembered AMD's Bulldozer, while also looking at ARM's big.little. So they came up with the hybrid architecture, smaller cores that can be fit in a mainstream CPU without needing the latest manufacturing nodes. So they started offering now more cores and more threads. With Arrow Lake they dropped threads in favor of cores (I believe full cores are smaller without the Hyperthreading feature), because they can market a bigger number of cores, much easier than trying to market a high number of threads, that 95% of consumers wouldn't understand anyway.
In any case, in CPUs it's happening what is already happening in storage. In storage capacity keeps getting higher, in both HDDs and SSDs(in SSDs also speed is improving), but meaningful "low" capacity still remains at certain price points. A 2TB HDD for example, probably remained at the same price point (haven't really checked) the last many years. A 1TB SSD is probably selling at a not much lower price than what was selling 3-4 years ago. Companies will never offer a more than enough option to consumers for a very low price. 1TB SSD is more than enough for consumers, a 500GB SSD is more than enough for older systems. Well, we will never get a 1TB SSD for $20 and a 500GB SSD for $10, because now we have 8TB options. We will never get a 2TB HDD for $30, because now we have 30TB options. And we will never get a good 8 (big) cores CPU for $100, because now we have 16-24 core CPUs and tomorrow even 40-50 core CPUs.
PS Many who know their needs will just go AM4, or second hand/refurbished systems and do their job for peanuts. Even a 4 core Haswell system with an SSD can run about most things that people use today.