It's hardly surprising that a new chipset and therefore a new motherboard would be required for Intel's next range.
Whilst yes I could say it's typical old Intel being greedy and money grabbing, I will withhold judgement until we see what comes with the chipset.
As it is, if AMD and the Ryzen 3000 series can give me the same or within 5% gaming performance of Intel then my next CPU will be a Ryzen for my main machine, but if it can't then I will stick with my 7700K.
Depends on what you do, If like me you prefer high refresh rate gaming at 1080P i.e 24" 240Hz monitors, Then I highly doubt AMD will catch up to Intel anytime soon, An example is that an 8700K paired with a Radeon 7 with the 8700K at an all core boost of 4.70GHz in the opening area of the Earth zone in Destiny 2 max settings 1080P gives around 140FPS, With a Ryzen 2700X I get 70FPS in the exact same position due to being extremely CPU bound, AMD REALLY need to up their game in the single core performance area.
Depends on what you do, If like me you prefer high refresh rate gaming at 1080P i.e 24" 240Hz monitors, Then I highly doubt AMD will catch up to Intel anytime soon, An example is that an 8700K paired with a Radeon 7 with the 8700K at an all core boost of 4.70GHz in the opening area of the Earth zone in Destiny 2 max settings 1080P gives around 140FPS, With a Ryzen 2700X I get 70FPS in the exact same position due to being extremely CPU bound, AMD REALLY need to up their game in the single core performance area.
Majority of games are limited by a single thread when CPU limited, in fact Dx11 does that by design. But that should be scratched off because that's just optimisation? I doubt many care about the underlying reason for why high refresh rate gaming is better on Intel, across the board. De facto Intel spanks AMD in that particular load and it's silly to swipe it under the rug and say "well that's just optimisation, AMD is still usable!!"That's not AMD. That's bad optimization for Ryzen architecture. They aren't that far behind.
That's not AMD. That's bad optimization for Ryzen architecture. They aren't that far behind.
Sounds more like issues with Bungie not AMD.
Majority of games are limited by a single thread when CPU limited, in fact Dx11 does that by design. But that should be scratched off because that's just optimisation? I doubt many care about the underlying reason for why high refresh rate gaming is better on Intel, across the board. De facto Intel spanks AMD in that particular load and it's silly to swipe it under the rug and say "well that's just optimisation, AMD is still usable!!"
Depends, A lot of games favour single core performance and some are just better coded for Intel than AMD.