This is interesting for tech enthousiasts in general, wether you are on Intel, AMD, Qualcom, you name it.
Personally I have a 12600k finally thinking I had an upgrade path with intel but now...well I dont feel like I do.
Im just going to go AMD for the next build in the future.
Same boat. I even have a spare LGA1700 motherboard. I had planned to grab a Raptor Lake i7 for my "main" rig and then toss the 12700 plus spare mobo in a secondary machine. It's an upgrade I don't really need, but I figured why not? Then this story broke. The problem, as noted by several previous posters, is trust. CPUs traditionally account for a negligible proportion of hardware failures. As long as you don't overclock, you can typically count on your CPU working for far longer--possibly
decades longer--than its performance remains relevant. With zero errors.
Raptor throws that principle out the window. It may work today; it may work tomorrow, but you'll never really know. The fact that Intel announces a new "final" fix for the problem on a biweekly basis certainly doesn't engender confidence. I'm morbidly curious to see how the secondary market shakes out over the mid/long term. I'd bet on Alder Lake holding inflated value and RPL dropping into the toilet. All because of trust. I can't think of a worse scandal relating to a CPU product line, at least not in this century. Prescott was disappointing, but as far as I know it didn't self-destruct. Bulldozer, likewise.
None of this is to say that AMD's recent products have been free of teething issues--EXPO goofiness, extra-long boot times, the infamous burnt socket controversy. Even the Zen 5 launch could be characterized as a blunder--not because an unimpressive generational performance uplift is a big deal in itself, but rather because AMD wildly overhyped it, and in so doing managed to provide cover for Intel's implosion-in-progress. AMD, as the saying goes, never misses an opportunity to miss an opportunity.
Then there's the ongoing story of Windows 11's scheduling scheme, which affected/affects both Intel and AMD. (Sidenote: I'm amused at how quickly we went from "You NEED Win11 if you're running e-cores," to, "Linux and even Win10 are superior at handling modern CPUs!") At this point I think you'd have to be desperate and/or mildly insane to buy any new product from Intel or AMD in the first few months after release. Certainly any new platform, chipset, or architectural quirk should be allowed to age out.