- Joined
- Jan 18, 2021
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Processor | Core i7-12700 |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI B660 MAG Mortar |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 |
Memory | G.Skill Ripjaws V 64GB (4x16) DDR4-3600 CL16 @ 3466 MT/s |
Video Card(s) | AMD RX 6800 |
Storage | Too many to list, lol |
Display(s) | Gigabyte M27Q |
Case | Fractal Design Define R5 |
Power Supply | Corsair RM750x |
Mouse | Too many to list, lol |
Keyboard | Keychron low profile |
Software | Fedora, Mint |
It goes without saying that different test suites will yield different results. My point wasn't, "AMD is LYING," or, "I MUST DEFEND INTEL's SACRED HONOR!" I don't care to enlist in the eternal (and eternally tedious) corporate-fanboy war. My point was that we don't need AMD's PR campaign to give us a glimpse at the 7800x3d's performance profile. We already know that in the general case, it will not perform anywhere near "24% faster than the 13900k." But sure, there are always outliers. If you happen to adore a particular game that massively favors one architecture over another, then buy accordingly, averages be damned.TPU's review had the 7950X3D at 4 percent faster in gaming over the 12 games he picked. A slightly different group of games (some games swing wildly with cache's benefits, some barely change) and the 7800X3D and 10 percent is believable. AMD's slide:
Rainbow Six Siege.
Total War.
Horizon.
Red Dead 2.
Which of these 4 games did TPU include in his review? None.
He selected Cyberpunk instead of Red Dead 2, God of War instead of Horizon Zero Dawn, Age of Empires instead of Total War, all games that heavily favor Intel. I'm not accusing him of doing anything wrong, I'm just pointing out that there are 4 games that are massively ahead with Ryzen, and they were not in his 12 game selection. He had many games that Intel is usually ahead at.
That's why it was 4 percent faster on average instead of 10 percent.
Personally I love Red Dead 2, and detest Cyberpunk. Horizon Zero Dawn is a much better game than God of War. And the new Age of Empires is not good, so Ryzen is great for me. Rainbow Six Siege no comment, but is seems a lot more important than CS:Go or other 1000fps games
Benchmarks aside, the main thrust of my comment is that no CPU priced at $450 is particularly appealing for a gaming use case. Sure, if money is no object, or if you're a highly competitive twitch gamer who craves stratospheric frame rates in CPU-bound situations, then the 7800x3d might be for you, but most gamers will be vastly better off buying a $200-300 CPU instead, and putting the extra money towards a beefier GPU (or really towards anything else; pretend that Lisa Su bought you two weeks worth of groceries or w/e, lol). Future proofing doesn't really work as a justification here either, because if you buy into AM5 with a cheaper CPU now, then later you can grab a relatively inexpensive (say, Zen6) drop-in upgrade that will likely spank the 7800x3d--or you can just grab a 5800x3d or an i5 now and skip AM5 entirely. It isn't as if current mid-range CPUs will become obsolete for gaming any time soon.
A Ryzen 5 7600 will get you ~80% of the 7800x3d's gaming performance, for roughly half the money, today--and probably more performance in practice, once we invest the difference in other components. So yeah, I'm impressed by the tech, but until the price comes down on these Zen 4 x3d chips, I don't think they really move the needle in the gaming market. As noted earlier, even the 5800x3d didn't exactly rocket to the top of recommended lists until it dropped from its initial $450 MSRP, and that chip had (still has) a huge positional advantage, given the high number of existing AM4 owners looking for a final upgrade to their aging platform. There is, in other words, a built-in $200+ discount for large swathes of the 5800x3d's target audience. Its Zen4 successor has a much tougher row to hoe, value-wise.