That graph should both embarrass and motivate AMD. AMD really needs to look at prices as well as their position on 3D cache, as they are just too expensive, and more generally, lacking value especially when you look at the entire AM5 platform cost.
- there is nothing "embarrassing" in the graph. Things always move slowly in client tech segment. It takes years to gain/lose 5% due to long life of products. Average lifetime of PC is 5 years. One of my Ivy Bridge laptops lasted 9 years.
- 3D cache CPUs are the best selling gaming CPUs in the world for 14th consecutive months, globally. As more people hear about it and there are more SKUs for various users, there is more adoption. AMD scored a jackpot with 3D V-cache SKUs. no doubt about it.
- are they expensive? It depends. 5800X3D and 7800X3D are on par or faster in gaming than all i9 CPUs, so there is that.
- if your 8-core CPU is faster in gaming than 24-core CPU, you are not going to sell it for peanuts.
Intel will have more (inferior) cores than AMD in their chips very soon, so AMD with their 16 (superior) cores won't look so good from a marketing point of view, and you just know Intel has some very dirty marketing lined up to make their products look better against AMDs, so as AMD seems to have stagnated with their push for more cores on the desktop, they WILL have to lower prices, and even think twice about pushing their 8 core parts as some kind of premium choice, as Intel will be offering more cores at a lower price.
- very soon? Intel has had 24-cores on i9 since 2023. The core count has not made Intel increase market share. They have been losing market share in ALL segments, slowly and gradually, but consistently. Just look into graphs posted here.
- Intel is not able anymore to make their chips look better bacause most of those top chips guzzle too much power, as we know from recent instability issues...
- AMD stagnated with their push for more cores on the desktop? What kind of nonsense is this? Who needs more than 16 big cores on desktop? I'll tell you who. No one. Whoever needs more for content creation and rendering can buy HEDT and workstation platforms.
- as soon as 8-core AMD CPU beats every single Intel's 24-core CPU in gaming, there is no issue for 8-cores. Quite opposite. There is a serious issue with 24 cores because the question is why do you offer 24 cores to people when such CPU is not able to beat in gaming 8-core CPU? This is on Intel to figure out and explain to customers.
- 7800X3D IS a premium gaming device and it has been the best selling premium gaming CPU in last 14 months. Period.
For the record, I'm 100% sure that Zen 5 will be superior to anything Intel releases, but AMD's cache starved designs won't look good against Intel in gaming, which is what drives the consumer market.
- cache starved? Where did you take this nonsense from? Vanilla CPUs have enough cache and X3D CPUs have tones of cache.
- AMD CPUs are slowly but consistently gaining market share in every single segment under the Moon. Have you not noticed? Data is literally in front of your eyes. Open your eyes and see it.
It's time for AMD to stop messing around with the 3D cache band aid cash-grab, and just add more and better cache to the CPU itself, without glueing cache over the top of it, hindering performance from a thermal and clockspeed perspective, AMD also need to sort their awful memory controller out too. But AMD won't do that, as they are amateur, slightly naïve and are not cutthroat enough to ACTUALLY take Intel on and definitively beat them.
- hahaha! The more I go through your text, the more desperate copium it becomes with each line...
- AMD offers three CPU segments on desktop: vanilla, X3D and APUs. Intel does not offer any such veriery apart from generic CPUs
- your problem is that you think from Intel's point of view and you are not willing to see it from a different perspective
- people can buy vanilla CPUs for their needs, people can buy X3D gaming CPUs, people can buy APUs with more capable graphics. There is plenty of choice for diverse consumers' needs. You can remain wilfully blind to this trend of more specialized CPUs for people's compute needs, but that's your choice.
If I was AMD, I would simplify the lineup, and create only 2 product lines, Gaming and Creator/Productivity (Threadripper remains as HEDT). Ditch the 3D cache with the expensive manufacturing costs, and long time to market, as well as the consumer cash-grab associated with it, and lower prices.
- ditch 3D cache? This is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard!
- 3D V-cache has been the most transformative gaming performance booster in last 2 years. Even Intel will have it in...2027.
- say this to Intel, to lower prices on power guzzling CPUs that few people want to buy anymore
- it's Intel that needs to rethink their approach to get moving if they want to stop gradually losing market share in all segments
I would push the 8 core version as my low-cost gateway drug entry point for gamers and offer just 2 CPU's to choose from, an 8 core and a 16 core premium gaming chip, with a fair price gap between them. When buying these 2 gaming CPU's I would include a voucher for a rebate on AMD graphics cards.
- this is brain dead. I am sure AMD would not employ you in their sales department and risk going down the hill with your strategy
Then for the Creator/Productivity line I would create a low-cost budget 6 core CPU (from defective 8 core parts) aimed at Internet cafe's and people who only want a simple but performant low-cost computer.
- they already have several entry CPUs. Look it up and inform yourself.
Then a mid-range 12 core CPU, aimed at mid-range users for a bit of everything, gaming/productivity/content creation, made from die harvested defective 16 core parts.
- they already have such R9 chips. It's called 7900X and 7900X3D. Plus, Strix Point and Strix Halo will have 12 core SKUs.
Then a 16 core high-end productivity CPU, same as the 16 core gamer CPU but lower clocked.
- lower clocked than gamer CPU? I am starting to believe that you have no knowledge of how 7950X and 7950X3D work.
I would sell these at a lower margin for a few years, take the hit until market share was showing good growth, (AMD has shown no real market share growth for years) and then I would slowly start increasing margin as I look back at Intel as I surpassed their market share.
- no real market share growth for years? Do you live on the same planet as we do? Have you just landed from another galaxy?
I would also make moving to a quad-channel memory design a priority for AM6, which would support 32 core CPU's.
- Strix Halo will have quad-channel, and HEDT chips already have quad- and octa-channel. Nobody needs 32 cores on desktop, perhaps only Intel.
Thank you for your contribution.
wonder if they will eventually waiver and lift some of the upgrade restrictions. Many people don't really need a new PC, and not getting the new Windows is hardly an incentive to upgrade.
- they will have to do something with restrictions, as there will be a massive backclash and further movement towards Linux, including me.
- by punishing 70% of global users of Windows 10 to pay is not going to work. I can only say that.
- imagine millions upon million upon millions of older Windows 10 laptops in thousands of global institutions. Are they going to pay for restrictions and quickly move to WIndows 11? Some will, but Microsoft is going to have a gigantic public outcry on their back to deal with.
As for Meteor Lake, I'm guessing it just can't clock high enough to go into desktops, even with aggressive power settings "from the motherboard makers." Intel really did themselves in with the insane power settings of their previous architecture. It was unsustainable then, and now their replacement design doesn't appear to even be able to tolerate it, or maybe it just doesn't produce the same results. However you look at it, they just didn't bother pushing it out on desktops.
- Meteor Lake performance is the main reason why more OEMs than ever are buying Ryzen and Qualcomm CPUs/APUs.
- they could have pushed onyl weak i7 Meteor Lake on desktop. That's why they cancelled it and offered us "14th Gen".