I don't think I'm going to listen to claims of IPC increase anymore. It's not some intrinsic new feature that lifts performance across all apps by a certain amount. It's just the performance geometric average of select apps. So unless TPU picks the same apps as AMD used to compute IPC and only picked those select apps, then they will not get the same percent increase.
Now after reviews are in, we see that the same clocks, cores and cache means that the 9000 series is the same as the 7000 series unless an app is rewritten to take advantage of new features added to the CPU. There is no intrinsic new feature that boosts all app performance. You really have to look at each app and see if the performance is there for your specific usage case.
I'm a bit disappointed this is how things are playing out after waiting two years from the launch of the 7000 series.
So for users already invested in AM4(Ryzen 5000), still no reason to upgrade.
Uh no. the 7950X is 30% faster on average than the 5950X. That's what you should expect when upgrading a computer component. So for AM4 and older AMD users and Alder Lake and older Intel users, this is a good upgrade.
Edit: It is nice though that performance went up at least a little and power went down at least a little. That's something I guess.