When games don't use more than 6 threads it's down to single core performance:
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compar...l-i5-9400F-vs-Intel-i9-9900K/2905vs3397vs3334
Real-time strategy, MMOs, the micro-management style games, and of course, some of the AAA ones.
When considering gaming performance, synthetic benchmarks such as these are not particularly helpful.
Actual gaming benchmarks are much more relevant in cases like this.
Particular titles would be more helpful, and might help
@nickpra decide based on his game type preference.
No, no it is NOT. Ryzen dominates the budget cpu market. Intel offers no real value here.
If consumers can't afford a 9700K or 9900K, then they should be looking at Ryzen.
If you can afford the $200 for at least a 3600 or higher, Ryzen would be the better option.
But if we are talking strictly budget cpu's in the $100-150 range mentioned here, Intel is still the better value option. Ryzen 2600 lags
significantly behind the 9400F in average gaming performance.
https://www.gpucheck.com/en-usd/gpu/nvidia-geforce-rtx-2080-ti/amd-ryzen-5-2600/ultra
https://www.gpucheck.com/en-usd/gpu/nvidia-geforce-rtx-2080-ti/intel-core-i5-9400f-2-90ghz/ultra
This
may change when the 3500/3500x are released, as they are supposed to directly compete against the like of 9400F. But I wouldn't count on it, as there again you lose the multi-threaded advantage Ryzen usually holds due to lack of SMT on those SKUs.
Plus there are other considerations with Ryzen in the budget sector such as the speed of your memory directly controlling core-core latency, which can affect your performance as much as 20% or more. This does not happen with Intel.
@nickpra Perhaps it would help if we knew the speed of the memory you are using?
Considering all this, is it worth the extra $60-80 for the current gen Ryzen 3600. Probably.
You would probably also want to spend some extra $ for higher speed memory as well, which adds to the price difference.
This does not bode particularly well in this case, as it sounds like
@nickpra already has memory, and given the age, I would guess its probably not bleeding edge.
If $200 is too much to spend on just a cpu alone, and your memory budget is also low, or you
already have lower speed memory, Intel may still hold better value. Especially in this particular case.
Personally I try not to take arbitrary sides to either AMD or Intel. Whoever gives the better performance for the money, period.