No, we weren’t:
Apparently you lack reading skills, in addition to knowledge
Keep using the 7950X3D which is slower than 13900K in multithreaded workloads…
The 7950X3D is a tuned down 7950X, so if you “tune” a 7950X or a 13900K you can reduce the gap. Not saying Intel CPUs are power efficient (they are not !), but presenting the number the way you are doing is misleading
Maybe you can first argue with him and figure out why he was quoting the 7950X3D Techpowerup review.
And about your 7950X3D vs 13900k arguement.
Yes 7950X3D is slower then 13900k in multithreaded workloads..by 2% according to Techpowerup's Application performance summary, that's fact.
But it is also Yes it is 140W vs 276W, which is also fact.
While your claim was "The 7950X3D is a tuned down 7950X, so if you “tune” a 7950X or a 13900K you can reduce the gap"
I must tell you that Intel did tune down their 13900k and release the 13900T.
And the 13900T is a very rare CPU and almost no reviews existed.
You might not like it.
But we all know that it is not looking good when Intel tried to do the same.
The 12900K outpetformed the 5950X in that test.
And TPU didn't do a lot of efficiency tests but here you can see that 12x series processors have efficiency close to 5x series. The 12900K actually has a poor showing and the 5950X a great showing, probably because the 12900K was designed to be thermally unconstrained, whereas the 5950X can't handle the heat its cores produce at full load, so it clocks down, and desktop processors are way more efficient at lower clock speeds.
Yes it outperformances the 5950x by 7.6% , while consuming 91% more power.
12900k is faster, but also comsumes a lot more.
And about your "12x series processors have efficiency close to 5x series" arguement.
I don't see where is that came from.
Your quoted picture clearly shows
The best 12th gen sample was 9.6kj
The best 5000 series sample was 6.4kj
Which, the 5000 series had a 50% efficiency advantage.
And the 12900k isn't the most efficient 12th gen either...
And about the"thermally unconstrained" arguement.
"Hey my CPU can eat more electricity" is a good point in your mindset?
Okay I get that as a personal preference thing.
If you are judging CPUs on how many energy they can take before it overheats, I won't argue with you on that.
Intel had their previously very famous 7980XE which can take >1000W even.
I guess that's you favourite CPU.
I don't judge on these personal preference choices.
Just note that many of us do take the power bills very seriously at the times
And energy concern is very real.