Man, this is getting ridiculous. I get that at this point you're just desperately trying to either troll people or defend a multinational corporation you for some reason have an allegiance to, but let's dissect this a bit, shall we?
-There are two reasons for Intel's current gaming performance lead, both of which boil down to one point: games are still low-threaded applications. Intel thus wins (slightly) because they have higher max clocks and decent IPC. The other reason is that Intel Core has been the dominant x86 arch for almost a decade (2008-2017 or so), and a lot of game engines are still much better optimized for it. Intel also has higher multi-core turbo speeds, mostly due to ignoring power draw in recent chips.
-The reason the 12- and 16-core chips from AMD perform the best in games for their lineup isn't that they have more cores, but because they have the highest multi-core boost speeds. Games being low-threaded means that AMD's core advantage has little bearing on game performance. It thus stands to reason that a 10-core from Intel won't improve game performance due to core count either. A 10-core Intel chip at the same speed as an 8-core Intel chip on the same arch will perform within margin of error - at least until games start exceeding 4-6 threads.
-The ($750) 3950X trounces the ($600) 9900KS in most CPU-bound applications. Heck, it even beats the ($999) 10980XE in a lot of them. How's that for overpriced? Not all CPUs are made for gaming. And if you need gaming performance, the ($500) 3920X will do you just fine.
-With all of this said, Intel's "lead" boils down to ~11% (unrealistic 720p gaming) to ~1% (GPU-bound 4k gaming), with the realistic sweet-spot of 1440p for a CPU of this price hitting ~3.5% and 1080p for the esports crowd hitting ~6%. Tell me, how does that matter? At all? To anyone?