Is 4k gaming a future or 720p/1080p 240Hz? For me 4k cause it looks awesome and I think games and most of people here will agree with me. This is the way technology advancement should pursuit.
Hold on pal!
Whoever brought up that the two (high res / high refresh) are to be mutually exclusive or that the pursuit of one, can, does, or should go at the expense of another needs to get his head examined. And you, too, if you really think this is the case. This has absolutely nothing to do with the 'Intel gaming lead' or 'code optimized for Intel'.
Precisely the better threaded engines for gaming are also capable of pushing higher FPS. This is not about Ryzen versus Core. Its about shifting away from the dependance on single threaded applications. Did AMD really push that forward? Or is it just the general trend that we're now finally ready for it? Its the latter; consoles & mobile devices carry a higher core count, we have better APIs available (API development also instigated by consoles btw), so you will see the same development in gaming on (performance) PCs. Its just that simple, its about the common denominator. In the same vein, now that higher counts than quad are getting mainstream and consoles already had 6+ cores available, we see those being used in our 'gaming' CPUs.
Now think back,
despite quad cores being the norm for a decade on PC, prior to PS4, games simply did
not scale beyond a single thread. And even if your OSD did say they used more, you didn't gain much FPS from it.
Intel did what it did because there was no market to grab. Besides, their HEDT segment already offered six cores for ages, but nobody jumped on those either. There was never a demand, another writing on the wall was AMD's bulldozer exactly; '8' core CPUs with no workload to shine at, while being pretty bad at the workloads most people did use. AMD stacked a few royal failures in that regard which put them on the bench for a long time.
Your idea that 'pursuit of technology' is in ANY way going towards gaming wrt to the Zen architecture... jesus man. These are datacenter/server CPUs first and foremost, the rest is bonus. And again, the same goes for Intel. They can yell about their gaming dominance but that was also just
given to them because they dominated the market for a while, and they had their sweet time to fine tune things for the MSDT segment - much like you see with Ryzen 3000 right now (and lo and behold, the gap is shrinking fast for 'consumer workloads'...).
Let's not overinflate things, before it reads like another Intel press release.