An anonymous reader quote Hot Hardware:
If you’re looking for the best gaming CPU or the best CPU for desktop applications, there are only two choices to pick from: AMD and Intel. That fact has spawned an almost religious following for both camps, and the resulting flamewars, that make it tricky to get unbiased advice about the best choice for your next processor.

But in many cases, the answer is actually very clear. In fact, for most users, it’s a blowout win in AMD’s favor. That’s an amazing reversal of fortunes for the chipmaker after it teetered on the edge of bankruptcy a mere three years ago, making its turnaround all the more impressive as it continues to upset the entrenched Intel that enjoyed a decade of dominance… Pricing is the most important consideration for almost everyone, and AMD is hard to beat in the value department. The company offers a plethora of advantages, like bundled coolers and full overclockability on all models, not to mention complimentary software that includes the innovative Precision Boost Overdrive auto-overclocking feature.

You also benefit from the broad compatibility of Socket AM4 motherboards that support both forward and backward compatibility, ensuring that not only do you get the most bang for your processor buck, but also your motherboard investment. AMD also allows overclocking on all but its A-Series motherboards (see our article on how to overclock AMD Ryzen), which is another boon for users. And, in this battle of AMD vs Intel CPUs, we haven’t even discussed the actual silicon yet. AMD’s modern processors tend to offer either more cores or threads and faster PCIe 4.0 connectivity at every single price point.

“We’re not covering laptop or server chips,” the article notes, adding “There’s a clear winner overall, but which brand of CPU you should buy depends most on what kind of features, price and performance are important to you.”
Still, it’s noteworthy that AMD beats Intel in 7 out of 10 comparisons. The three in which Intel won were gaming performance (“only because we measure strictly by the absolute top performance possible”), drivers and software (“the company has an army of software developers [and] a decade of dominance also finds most software developers optimizing almost exclusively for Intel architectures”), and overclocking, where Intel “has far more headroom and much higher attainable frequencies.

“Just be prepared to pay for the privilege.”

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Source:: Slashdot