Supernova1138
Illustrious
Benjiwenji :
Please expand on your thought.
Well aside from the fact that a heavily overclocked AMD CPU is going to put out way more heat and consume way more power than a stock clocked Intel CPU, while at best performing similarly to the stock i5 in most applications with the really high overclock, there is also the fact you aren't guaranteed to get 5GHz out of an AMD CPU. Most of the time 4.5 to 4.6GHz is the maximum practical overclock and getting higher than that tends to require expensive cooling and a pretty high end motherboard to handle the power draw unless you luck out on the silicon lottery.
Point is, it is getting hard to recommend buying a CPU that needs to be overclocked to its absolute limits just to stay relevant in the present, let alone the future. Such a CPU isn't likely to do all that great in the long term unless the way a lot of software is written is radically changed to either offload more work to the GPU or to vastly improve multithreading to benefit from AMD's higher core count. DirectX 12 and Vulkan might do that for games, or it might not, it's hard to say as there's no finished games on the market that uses either API, and honestly by the time those APIs reach mainstream usage, the Piledriver FX CPUs are going to be obsolete at that point.