Before going into childish personal attacks, noone ever looks at synthetic multicore results and expects gaming results from them. For all the duration of multicore processors, 17 years. Everyone reads my comment about Adler Lake scores as single core for gaming and multi core for productivity.
That's the kind of replies you can expect when you make annoying replies like you did. I deliberately picked some data that no one believes reflects gaming performance, and you choose to react childish to it, as if I was clueless about it despite that I clearly just pointed this out.
Or, if I would use your vocabulary:
"And why, for God's sake, would you think that GB would reflect the performance of X3D as good as it does on Alder?"
Yeah, a bit childish. I'd say we're eve now.
I stated that 9% uplift in multicore AND REGRESSION in single core Geekbench result is a very bad prognosis for gaming increase that AMD is promising.
There's no reason to believe that the X3D would be slower in gaming, it's not very likely. (Well and neither is 20 % faster or whatever AMD said)
If you think you can make such a prognosis for X3D out of GB I'd say you're in a minority here. Just because GB was right about Alder it doesn't mean that GB is right every time, and it's especially not expected in such an odd product like X3D.
Now if Raptor Lake, or Raphael, would have a lower single GB score, that would surprise me.
It's not just me. In case you haven't read the source:
The single-core performance is almost the same but 3D V-Cache gains would mostly be apparent in cache-dependent workloads such as games rather than core-performance optimized benchmarks such as Geekbench.
The hardware improvements of X3D are nothing like the improvements of Alder. Maybe we should compare it to
Broadwell S instead? Seems more fitting to me, even though it wasn't extra L3.
It was about the same as the 4790K in both GB tests but always faster in games (except for C6) with an average of 19 % in low settings and resolutions, even though the latter runs up to 700 MHz faster.
In other words, neither single GB 4 or 5 could predict gaming performance from the extra cache back then.
In the end I blame Gbench, it's the same story every time. It should be banned from unreleased CPU's lol...
9% is a negligible performance improvement and literally very disappointing, in the ballpark of simple rebrands.
No user would ever notice better user experience with this.
Why does AMD even waste its time and resources, while instead doesn't pull the next generation Zen 4 CPUs launch forward?
Why don't you just read some background info instead of chasing higher model numbers? We've heard your Zen4 chanting for ages now. Oh and give me a sad face while you're at it.