For the same reason, I could not care less that i get 10 extra free cores with AMD systems. I want the performance for games, and that performance has always been plenty for 'productivity'. I have not been on AMD since Athlon (!) because they were always slower. While that may be true, it will hardly be enough for the majority. I mean, there are no arguments left other than "it's the platform you have used for many years". If AMD indeed takes the Single Thread performance lead then I cannot wait to see what intel does. Good thing is that there now are several 'serious' review sites (including this one) so it is very much possible to quickly get real and hard data once reviews are out and we don't have to rely on marketing material ! And then there is the leaked 3090 benchmarks which surprised me but were correct and downright disappointing. Especially on the RTX 30xx shortages, performance, pricing. However it feels like these last few months, all leaks from the sites I peruse have been accurate.
Reviews and actual benches with proper drivers are the selling point. No site can claim "performance = xx or over xx%" because if they are wrong, their reputation is tarnished very, very quickly. Wording is vague or chosen very careful to prevent blowback. You can join the discussion on AMD's leaked Ryzen 9 5900X CPU-Z benchmark scores on the OC3D Forums. Next week, AMD should reveal this information to the public. Our single-threaded and multi-threaded Ryzen 9 3900X scores come from the CPU-Z benchmark database.Īt this time, AMD has not confirmed how Zen 3 delivers major performance gains over Zen 2, be it via increased clock speeds, redesigned aspects of their Zen cores or both. With single-threaded and multi-threaded scores of 652.8, AMD's Ryzen 9 5900X offers 25.05% and 15.7% performance gains over the company's Ryzen 9 3900X respectively. As per the CPU-Z benchmark, this processor seems to have a 4.4 GHz single-core boost clock as well as 4 GHz in an all-core boost. These performance increases could be enough for AMD to definitively gain the single-threaded performance crown from Intel. This benchmarking data reveals large single-threaded and multi-threaded performance gains for AMD's upcoming Ryzen processors. Today, an alleged CPU-Z benchmark result for AMD's 12-core Ryzen 9 5900X have leaked online through the Chinese Forum Baidu, via on Twitter. AMD's due to reveal its Zen 3 architecture on October 8th, revealing to the world the next generation of Ryzen processors and the performance leaps that it will deliver to consumers.