If you check the description of that video, the AMD's at stock speeds, while the Intel's running at 5GHz all-core. Not all that useful a comparison if we're going to be OCing one but not the other
Well, Ryzen's XFR does most of the work, so I'd say its a pretty decent comparison and there is absolutely no way in hell the gap is just from OC. May get more pronounced, but then who buys K CPUs not to OC them?
Bottom line, overclocking on Intel is so easy, its a given, just be fair enough to count the added cost of cooling and perhaps board in your comparison when buying.
So the comparison I think is pretty damn useful, because it shows both systems at or near the top of their game.
AMD Ryzen 5 3600 vs Intel Core i5-9600K - Test procesorów (strona 17) Test i porównanie procesorów AMD Ryzen 5 3600 i Intel Core i5-9600K w grach i programach. Który jest wydajniejszy? Który warto kupić? Który będzie lepszym wyborem do gier
www.purepc.pl
wat? next time check your source..
Indeed,
you should have longer look, because your video contains a 2nd Gen Ryzen, but ok. The first video in your link shows this, 3rd rig being the Ryzen. The gap is visible in most of that sequence in the game.
Second game, big win for Ryzen, clearly loves cores (the i5 is also lagging by >10%)
It kinda goes on like that, doesn't it. When quad is enough, the 9350K leads, and by some noticeable margins too. When its not enough, Ryzen edges past, and sometimes even destroys it. Your PurePC link shows no 9350K... and the TPU link has no OC on the 9350K, while F version of it is on the very bottom.
And when I look onward in the video, the comparison is almost the same as the one I linked.
TL DR: nothing new to see here, is there?
View attachment 138925
Different setting? As you can see the left side has some kind of fog...
Who knows, I didn't make the video. But like pointed out above... this isn't rocket science guys. There is no reason to question those numbers in the greater scheme of it and they confirm everything we know about Intel, AMD, CPUs and gaming.
But, since its apparently hard to grasp, here's the summary
- Intel still wins on clockspeed, and still leads in games where clocks matter more than cores.
- AMD seems to get similar performance with lower clocks, hinting at higher IPC in some situations
- AMD cannot seem to extract high maximum FPS due to lower clocks and probably CCX latencies.
- Intel offers lower core counts at similar price.
-
If price is no object, Intel still makes a better gaming CPU.
Its possible for competing products to... you know, compete. Its also possible to overestimate Zen's performance and come out losing. So let's not do that, and keep the info realistic. There is simply a lot to choose these days, everybody wins. The above still wouldn't mean I'd jump on an Intel CPU again
today... but from the viewpoint of Intel's marketing team, they're actually not
completely wrong.