h2323 :
Actually the majority of modern games are now multi-thread, along with NEW software. FX8350 has been remarkably resilient to time, it has improved its standing when included in benchmarks for new hardware as time has gone by. New software and new game are used to bench new hardware, FX has improved over time. For those who have put the time in finding accurate information the fx 8350 is on par with i73570k and can compete with i7 3770k especially when overclocked, it is also a superior multi-tasker. Not having it on the charts with i7 up to 3770 is an opinion that has to do with it not being what people want it to be and not seeing for what it is.
We are discussing gaming here, in particular. Not multitasking, which the FX-8350 excels at.
Based on the evidence I am going to have to disagree when it comes to this arena:
http://www.tomshardware.com/preview/preview,2-3789-8.html?key=df55ecddb9d0d7a699fe31cca7f44d39fa9e7a32
Elder Scrolls Online: FX-8530 < i3-3220
http://www.tomshardware.com/preview/preview,2-3683-10.html?key=c4519d9e645a2f01f4a0a08796e685d08733377b
Call of duty: Ghosts: FX-8350 slightly better than i3-3220, but significantly below stock Core i5-2500K
http://www.tomshardware.com/preview/preview,2-3634-10.html?key=f0a22b34f646d8a0456f251ddbd16b8b13b0d20a
Battlefield 4: FX-8350 in the middle between Core i3-3220 and stock i5-2500K
http://www.tomshardware.com/preview/preview,2-3451-8.html?key=e2d52c3793fe43d3b944f0ac3d7c2ebe8bbc7f19
Crysis 3: The FX-8350 does well here, matching a Core i5-3550 in average FPS, but the minimum falls close to Core i3-3220
http://www.tomshardware.com/preview/preview,2-3379-7.html?key=98a6de2c9b8c5f755c3442e7327b9136d3daf949
Far Cry 3: the FX-8350 does well but still falls slightly short of the i3-3200
Those are the last five latest, newest games we compared with modern engines (I excluded DOTA2 and LoL, which I wouldn't consider relevant as they all had over 100 FPS and you can run them fine with a Pentium). On average, I'd say the FX-8350 usually ends up very close to an i3-3220. I'd give the FX-8350 an edge overall, but not a big one. The Core i5 usually beats it by a significant margin. As a gamer its an obvious choice.
But lets put that into perspective. Now lets look at today's price and particulars on Newegg:
Core i3-4350: newer Haswell architecture compared to i3-3220, and a higher 3.4 GHz clock
$125
FX-8350: as tested
$190
Core i5-4570: newer Haswell architecture compared to i5-2500, 100 MHz deficit
$200
Now, with facts in hand, are you going to tell me you'd recommend a gamer to get the FX-8350 over a Core i5 for about the same price? (the 4570 was $190 last month on Newegg by the way)
And are you going to tell me you'd recommend a gamer with $125 to spend the extra $65 to get an FX-8350 for almost no practical gain? INSTEAD of getting a Core i5 for practically the same cost increase?
Lets be reasonable here. The FX-8350 is an awesome multi-threading workhorse, but a good gaming processor for the money it 'aint. Not within arms reach of the Core i5's $200 price tag.