- Joined
- Aug 28, 2019
With the rapid rise of CUDIMM causing memory speeds to go up, and more reliably, AMD definitely needs to pay more attention to the I/O die and memory next time around. At least 3D V-Cache lessens the need for higher memory speeds for gaming.Zen 5 is quite strong in productivity workloads on Linux and really only seems to be held back on desktop by a weak I/O die and Windows weirdness - the enterprise counterpart Turin chips with a beefier I/O die seem to be absolute beasts.
If AMD felt threatened by Arrow Lake, they could do a Zen 5+ next year. But nah.
We're expecting +8% gaming performance between the 7800X3D and 9800X3D, with higher clock speeds being a contributing factor, although the 3D V-Cache may have changed significantly. At the very least, the way it's laid out on TSVs seems to be different out of necessity.The Zen5 X3D chips have yet to come out for those seeking gaming performance...
The 9800X3D is of no consequence to a 7800X3D owner, but it seems like AMD has stopped producing it to clear it out of the market. So it's 9800X3D or nothing on AM5.