The TPU review is in total agreement with Guru's, Tom's and Anandtech's reviews and for me it is enough. Bonus: Puget.
By the way, on the
next page (Inventor) the 5800X3D loses on all fronts to the 5800X. And their conclusion is: "
Those who rather want to work should therefore better keep their hands off the Ryzen 7 5800X3D in most cases, because what is offered is simply too little in relation to the other products.".
PS: 5800X3D costs as much as 5900X or 13600K and most likely a 7800X3D will cost as much as a 7900X. I wish you success in gaming for a lot of money, gentlemen.
Did you or did you not say that the non-3D won in
ALL workload? (spoiler: you did, let's remind you again)
Let's not forget that, except for gaming, a possible 7600X3D will perform below the 7600X in other applications.
So let's go through this (again): You are wrong. the 3D will
NOT be outperformed in
all workload/"other applications" by the non-3D part.
I have no clue why you keep trying to deny this.
Is there or is there not (major) application where the 3DX beats the non-3D?
autoCAD is a major application used by many industries (inb4 use intel, not the discussion)
Puget is mostly content creation, not all workload. It's adobe (and similar), rendering and a wee bit of unreal. It is not representative of all workloads! No diss on them, but they mostly to photo/video editing related reviews.
Workloads include among others (and Im not mentioning all). Coding, CAD designing, simulation (like physics), AI/ML related, mixed server-stuff (encoding, decoding, zip, VM, etc.), degridding.
Again, you can just see all the workloads that is on Phoronix/Openbenchmark test suite to get even more
Puget, TPU, Guru Tom, Anandtech and Phoronix is in no way the end all to determine if a product fits a users usecase. They can give numbers and pointers, but the end-user (or IT department xd) needs to see their requirement vs cost.
example would be if you already have an AM4. You do mostly workloads and some gaming, what (AM4) CPU do you upgrade to between 5800X or 3DX?
if you're workload is rendering or image editing, then probably the 5800X, if you do AutoCAD (as seen from Igors review) you go by 3DX. especially if it's the 2D performance you need, where the 3D crushes (411 vs 313).
Same for (at least some) physics simulation (as seen from TPU's own review), or on the other hand if it's rendering then the 5800X (or even 59x0X) will obviously be better.
edit: just for reference, a mate I have had a autoCAD sim going for a couple of hours.... that kind of difference(from Igors review) is massive when taken over longer time