WYP
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AMD has now released the specification of their Ryzen 5 1500X, their first Ryzen Quad core.

Read more on AMD's Ryzen 5 1500X CPUs.

Read more on AMD's Ryzen 5 1500X CPUs.
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Why would anyone compare the R5's to an i7 7700k? The R5's are the mid range, just like intels i5's, so lets compare apples to apples shall we.
Its a tough one because clockspeed will go in Intels favor when the 7700K gets mentioned.....
Yup and anything up to four cores the 7700k slaughters my 5820k. Any more though? the scales start to tip fast.
I think any one buying more than four cores should understand that.
Plus of course Intel have been working on their clock speeds since Sandy. It took them forever to actually get to 5ghz, and most I have seen will "only" do 4.8.
Why would anyone compare the R5's to an i7 7700k? The R5's are the mid range, just like intels i5's, so lets compare apples to apples shall we.
X99 was never aimed at gamers, so why should Ryzen?
Both still provide an amazing experience.
If you base that theory on AMD's advertising and promotion of the Ryzen range, it is simply not true. It's plastered all over AMD's marketing that these chips were not just designed for prosumers. AMD wants gamers to buy an R7 1700 and they pushing it on them in the same way Intel pushes the 7700K. Where does it categorically state that these CPU's were not aimed at the gaming market? What slide or what specific trait about them was not designed for gaming machines? Maybe when the R5 range comes out, if it can clock to 4.4Ghz on air and has IPC improvements over the R7 range and is therefore better for gaming but not for content creation, then maybe we can say that R7 was not aimed at gamers.
But this is true. With my Fury at 1440p, I will not lose any meaningful frames going from a hypothetical 7700K to a 1800X or even a 1700 with an overclock of 4Ghz. I will likely gain some coming from my actual 4670K at 4.5Ghz.
We are talking about the 1800x though. And that was not marketed at gamers. It was aimed at taking down the 6900k. Sure games were used, but they always are. Doesn't mean it's the focal point of what the 1800x is aiming to achieve. If you want to be overly critical and analytical, sure it is marketed for gamers. But reality is, it was not.
BTW, it is not possible to state what specific trait a CPU has that was not designed for games. It's a CPU. It quite literally just processes 0s and 1s. It doesn't care what it is. AMD or Intel. It really is not possible to point out specific things. Games use math and CPUs do math. So it really can't be used as a basis for an argument.
For the 1700/x, they were never really marketed for anything other than price comparisons to Intel. And while yes the Ryzen has mostly 1080p issues, give the BIOS's time and game devs a month or two to optimize performance. This should have been expected. It's a brand new uArch. It's just much worse this time due to the fact EVERYTHING has been going for Intel. So games are optimized with those.
As for the R5. I won't bother speculating. Still got months for any reviews for those.