| > "fairly useless" here is over 60 fps average in the heavy titles and 90-110 fps in the multiplayer titles You missed the point. The point was UB claimed the 9100F was 10% faster than a 2700X. In reality the 2700X absolutely massacres the 9100F in gaming performance. Higher average FPS, higher min FPS, etc... Even the 1600AF trivially beats the 9100F. > with a similar ratio of minimums as the 1600 AF (so no more or less prone to stutter). 1600 AF in Battlefield V: 126 average, 91 1% lows 9100F in Battlefield V: 116 average, 49 1% lows That's not a similar ratio at all. > Zen2 made a ~30% improvement over Zen1 in gaming performance No it didn't. You're massively misrepresenting (or mis-remembering) Zen1's gaming performance. https://tpucdn.com/review/amd-ryzen-7-3700x/images/relative-... 3.6ghz/4.4ghz boost 3700X is ~11% faster than the 3.6ghz/4ghz boost 1800X in 1080p gaming. Even at 720p it's a 15% gap between those two, not 30% https://tpucdn.com/review/amd-ryzen-7-3700x/images/relative-... > Zen1 especially was hot garbage in gaming, those thread-heavy titles aren't representative of its average performance. No it wasn't. It lost to the equivalent Intel CPU, but it was far from bad. You could easily pair a Zen1 CPU with just about any GPU and never see a significant bottleneck. The exception being the absolute top-end. And, critically, if you had an older Intel quad core, like a 7600K, the Zen1/Zen+ CPUs were still an upgrade in gaming performance. See for example at 1440p the gap between Zen1 & Zen2 & Intel being almost nonexistent even with a 2080 Ti: https://tpucdn.com/review/amd-ryzen-7-3700x/images/relative-... > Having 8 faster cores is still more desirable for gaming than 16 slower cores. Of course, but you still need enough cores to avoid stuttering. Which means... > And single-core performance is a good analogue of "per-core performance" so this number remains very relevant. Is not correct at all. Single-core performance isn't an analogue of anything these days. You need a minimum number of cores and good single-core performance. And it's not just HWUB with these conclusions that an i5 is no longer sufficient. Gamersnexus has the same recommendations: "In more games each year, we’re noticing the cut-down Core i5 exhibiting high frametime variability that counteracts its fleeting performance superiority with unreliable, stuttery behavior. The AMD R5 3600 is more reliable and consistent in its performance across all games we’ve tested, making it the better gaming option." ( https://www.gamersnexus.net/guides/3533-best-cpus-of-2019-ro... ) |