Honestly, nothing is sure about the naming or (sadly) date."Meteor Lake." This chip will be built on Intel's swanky 7 nm EUV silicon fabrication node", why exactly should we believe this statement ?
But we know for sure that Intel is buying a lot of 7nm EUV equipment from ASML. So something will be launched.

That's not a huge achievement when you think that Ryzen was the first good AMD design since 2007's K10.Because its a vast improvement over previous socket AMD processors. It was/is fairly priced.
And 6 years since the awful Bulldozer.
If you compare Intel CPUs from 2017-2018 and 2011 (not to mention 2007), the architecture is similar, but the performance and efficiency are in 2 different worlds as well.
No one says it's a bad CPU. But you paid for 8C/16T and you said yourself you never used 16 threads (and you said it like if it was good...?)It more than covers my needs.
Very good effeceincy in lower power states.
And thats all I can really ask for in an AMD product.
Would you be so happy about 2700X benchmark results (Cinebench etc) if they were 10-20% lower?

So the question I asked was: wasn't this a suboptimal choice? Maybe 2600X would be better for you?