To be fair, since the focus is gaming, how fast it zips / unzips files and runs apps that are not on the PC are of no consequence. Its like telling a soccer mom in Florida that she's be better off w/ 4 WD and snow tires. My gaming box is a 'after hours' use of a CAD workstation. Ryzen extra cores have 0 impact on anything I do in the course of making my living. From TPU reviews ....
2700x - Single-threaded performance still lower than Intel's, limited overclocking potential, Memory still a bit more problematic than on Intel, Lacks integrated graphics. This means that for general productivity, AMD's Ryzen is now on par with what Intel has to offer . The majority of games definitely run faster on Intel.
2700 - Single-threaded performance still lower than Intel's, limited overclocking potential, Memory still a bit more problematic than on Intel, Lacks integrated graphics. If you're purely into gaming, then Intel's 8th generation Core processor family is still ahead in gaming performance, and the i7-8700 looks like the better choice at this price.
2600x - Single-threaded performance still lower than Intel's, limited overclocking potential, Memory still a bit more problematic than on Intel, Lacks integrated graphics. The majority of games definitely run faster on Intel,
I don't see that anyone wasn't aware that the Ryzen CPus are cheaper, nor are they forgetting that the Ryzen MoBos are more expensive.
Ryzen 2700x - $330
Accompanying MSI Gaming MoBo w/ ALC 1220 $170
Total = $500
Intel 8700k - $380
Accompanying MSI Gaming MoBo w/ ALC 1220 $130
Total = $510
So Intel package is costing ya $10 more ... but 8700k is outta stock on many sites.
You're making a really weird argument that doesn't hold up at all.
Let's use actual pricing for a moment, from SCAN here in the UK.
The
cheapest X470 +
2700X combination is £431.47
The
cheapest Z370 +
8700K combination is £554.95 - The motherboard IS cheaper, but because of Intel's supply issues, the CPU alone costs more than the AMD combo does in total. Also, that motherboard is hot garbage for overclocking - look at the VRM heatsinks and compare them. You spend an extra £10 to move up to the MSI Gaming Plus that is equivalent to the AMD board.
That's an extra £133.98 (22%) to get into a platform that does one job 15% better than the other and other jobs about 10% worse.
Not to mention, there are titles now, and will be titles in future, that utilise more than 8 threads. The 2700X is already faster in selected games (Rise of the Tomb Raider), than the 8700K is, and that's *WITH* the IPC and clockspeed disadvantage:
But of course, you're arguing that the 8700 is a better buy, so let's step down a level, to the 8700, with the same MSI motherboard, the 8700 being £389.99 - Combined, they're £495.46, so still £64.05 more expensive than the AMD solution and in the process you've sacrificed the ability to overclock and increase your value.
To get that back you could drop to the 8600K, and you finally come in under the price of the AMD platform at £424.96, but you've lost hyperthreading and 500MHz of boost clock in the process. There's also less likelihood that your 8600K will actually clock as high even if you DO overclock it, because it's a lower end part to start with.
And then you've still got the opportunity, as you relied on in your post, to save more money by buying a 2700 instead and overclocking that, so you can drop your expenditure to £391.48 and again, save money compared to the Intel solution.
At the end of it all, you can pay 22% more for Intel's equivalent,
Or you can sacrifice overclocking and 2 cores, and still pay more, in return for a marginal IPC/clockspeed increase
Or you can pay less for a motherboard and still effectively lose overclocking because your board is garbage-tier
Or you can pay less for motherboard and CPU, and lose hyperthreading and 2 cores.
Or you can buy AMD and sacrifice a tiny amount of IPC/clockspeed in return for 2 cores (That some games already leverage and more will leverage in future), hyperthreading, overclocking, and a cost saving.
No brainer to me unless you have money to burn upgrading your rig to the latest and greatest at every release.
nvidia eat at least 150W less power and more if we check cpus also.
so, only 150w different means,that if 100000 ppl buy amd parts we need more nuclear factorys... different is 15 TWh/year!
Actually no:
https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/nvidia-geforce-rtx-2080-ti-founders-edition,5805-10.html
https://www.tomshardware.co.uk/asus-rx-vega64-strix-oc,review-34379-4.html
A Founders edition 2080ti consumes the same power as an AIB partner Vega 64 does.
And Intel's "95W" TDP is complete horseshit. The 8700K actually consumes about 20% more power under load than the 2700X does if both CPU's are run stock.
https://img.purch.com/image006-png/...PLzAvNzY1NTA0L29yaWdpbmFsL2ltYWdlMDA2LnBuZw==