There are memory kits that work perfectly well with Zen. I swapped my old b-die from skylake x into a Ryzen 3 build w/o one hiccup. Now if you choose to go with a different type (individual user choice), you will be taking on some effort to deal with the compatibility issues. And in context it IS a new platform that is maturing compared to Intel whose sitting on the same controller that they'd been fine tuning for a decade. That said, it's not something that keeps me up at night or prevent me from going one route or the other.
As this post says you guys are making it out to be a deal breaker when it's not. No one's telling that guy I quoted to bUy AMD. He implied AMD is crap therefor he'll still buy Intel when really it is that he prefers Intel. There's not a thing wrong with bias, just don't wrap it around bs.
Of course there are memory kits that work perfectly well with Zen... Nobody has said otherwise!!!! All I was saying in plain English was that there are more compatibility issues with AMD Ryzen than with Intel... really really simple concept.
Nobody is trying to make a big deal about it... at least not me... but the fact remains that generally speaking, Intel has less issues with memory (for whatever reason). Again, not saying AMD has a lot, but it is, in fact, something you need to consider more versus Intel.
Again, it isn't a deal breaker... not sure who said or inferred that...this all started with the words "better compatibility" and a "trouble free" experience. Neither of those are false, nor are they blown out of proportion. Intel does have better compatibility and you will have a greater chance at a trouble free experience (not that the chance with either is high, especially if you stick to the QVL). With Intel you can go off the script (QVL) and have more chance at success than with AMD.