So it's 720p, then.
I agree. Any form of upscaling at 1080p, be it FSR or DLSS looks unbearably bad. 1440p and up is a different story, but that's way out of the 8700G's league.
With that said, I think the 8700G is an awesome achievement. 8-core CPU with a 6400/6500XT level GPU in a single package for 300 quid? If I didn't have a 1660 Ti in my HTPC, I'd say, sign me up right now. But I'm not fooling myself into believing that it can do 1080p with high graphics in the latest games because it simply can't.
This game is already godawful at 1080p. Getting FSR in the mix makes it unplayable. For me at least. I don't care how much FPS I'm getting at this point, be it 60, be it 9 thousand. Image quality is just unbearably bad. And yeah, 1080p gamers do care about these artifacts because they are getting much more of them than those rocking more advanced displays.
Like I said, if you are highly concerned about the dimensions of your system then of course this CPU makes all sorts of sense. But if your only goal is to make it cost efficient and you don't care how huge it is because you never move it then 8700G is not for you.
Here are some benchmark numbers for you.
Cyberpunk 2077 Benchmarks
1080P High FSR Off - min. FPS: 27.57 | ave. FPS: 32.60 | max FPS: 39.73
1080P Medium FSR Off - min. FPS: 34.69 | ave. FPS: 40.16 | max FPS: 47.69
1080p Low FSR Off - min. FPS: 43.73 | ave. FPS: 51.57 | max FPS: 61.54
1080P High FSR Quality - min. FPS: 33.74 FPS | ave. FPS: 41.10 | max FPS: 50.14
1080P Medium FSR Quality - min. FPS: 45.72 FPS | ave. FPS: 53.73 | max FPS: 64.62
1080p Low FSR Quality - min. FPS: 53.72 FPS | ave. FPS: 64.12 | max FPS: 77.92
I am only demonstrating that the claim that you are stuck to 720p30 Low/Medium is patently false. Even without FSR you can achieve 1080p30 High. I'm not saying it's great, but it isn't nearly as bad you you keep insisting it is.
Edit: format of the text table to more uniformly display the data.