To answer your question with such ease, why not? Plus I want some competition from the blue side, who wouldn't want a 12 core CPU @ 5.3ghz, I know I would, do I need it? Hell no, do I want it? Hell yes! 6 - 8 core CPU's maybe the mainstream but that doesn't mean that should be the limit. Plus the naming scheme is all ruined now, 10900k = 10 core 20 thread / now the new 11900k is an 8 core 16 threaded part? That's just silly.
Well, my point is that these sockets are
mainstream platforms, by pushing too many cores and PCIe lanes on this platform they are rising the costs for most PC buyers. I would much rather they lowered the entry for HEDT and kept mainstream at 100W TDP and ~8 cores (for now).
First off, no I wouldn't want to buy a hypothetical quad core -- even if it was 2x faster than 8/12 core CPUs (which is never going to happen anyway). At best, I would possibly look at getting it for older legacy programs that have trouble scaling with more cores, but there are barely any left at this point.
Clearly you don't know how software scales.
Even in a perfect environment, two cores at half speed would not catch up with a single core at full speed.
The more cores you divide a workload between, the more overhead you'll get. There will always be diminishing returns with multithreaded scaling.
We've had 8 cores being the standard now in sub-300 USD gaming consoles for 7 years -- that's already the BARE MINIMUM.
What kind of reasoning is this?
And your phone probably have 6-8+ cores as well. Performance matters,
not cores.
Nobody's buying high end desktop CPUs for "good enough" performance today.
Just a kind reminder, Rocket Lake (and AM4) are mainstream platforms.
Quad cores have been good enough for so long so far only because of Intel's maintained monopoly on the desktop market (which they no longer have).
Nonsense. There were 8-core prototypes of Cannon Lake (cancelled shrink of Skylake), and planned and cancelled 6-core variants of Kaby Lake, long before Zen. 14nm might be mature now, but it took a very long time to get there.
And this is assuming they do not get another big security exploit which will take their performance advantage away post-patch (practically guaranteed at this point with their rehashed old architecture).
A well known architecture is likely to have less problems than an untested one. The more time passes by, the greater the chance of finding a large problem.
And don't pretend like most of these vulnerabilities didn't affect basically every modern CPU microarchitecture in one way or another.
And what's going to be "plenty" for a long time is irrelevant. Nobody's buying enthusiast level performance CPUs for "good enough" performance
So people should buy CPUs they don't need, just in case?
The reality is, unless you're a serious content-creator, 3D-modeller, developer or someone else who runs a workload which significantly benefits from more than 8 cores, you're better off with the fastest 6 or 8 core you can find, for the most responsive and smooth user experience. Not to mention the money saved can be put into other things, including a better GPU, or future upgrades etc.
I honestly think it's time for this dinosaur company to go out of business and wouldn't miss them one bit if they did -- they have been a joke for over half a decade now and are refusing to compete on either price or performance in any meaningful way, despite being massively behind their direct competitor whilst outside competitors are already knocking on their door and about to blow them out of the water…
The factual incorrections here are too severe to even cover in this discussion thread.
You are just biased against Intel, and don't even care about the facts.
We need more competition, not less.
Apple Silicon and RISCV competitors at a fraction of their size are going to mop the floor with Intel in the next year or two in both efficiency and performance
You don't even have a faint idea about what these things are.
And please stop giving any more awful suggestions to either AMD or Intel about handicapping their mainstream platforms to 8 cores. Not everyone who needs more than 8 CPU cores needs the extra PCI-E lanes, nor has the space for a HEDT socket (which is too large for those of us looking for a small but future-proof ITX build, myself included). The fact that AMD's 12 and 16 core parts have been selling out consistently on the mainstream platform only proves you wrong.
It's not about handicapping, it's about driving up the costs with unnecessary features when there is already a workstation/enthusiast platform to cover this. And BTW, HEDT motherboards in mini-ITX form factor does exist, not that it makes any sense, but anyway.
And how many of those buying these 12 and 16 core models are doing it just to brag about benchmark scores? Probably a good portion.