Conclusion: History is Written By The Victors

I have never used the word ‘bloodbath’ in a review before. It seems messy, violent, and a little bit gruesome. But when we look at the results from the new AMD Threadripper processors, it seems more than appropriate.

When collating the data together from our testing, I found it amusing that when we start comparing the high-end desktop processors, any part that was mightily impressive in the consumer space suddenly sits somewhere in the middle or back, holding its lunch money tightly. While the 16-core Ryzen 9 3950X and the 8-core Intel i9-9900KS enjoy a lot fun in the consumer space, when Threadripper rolls up, they are decidedly outclassed in performance.

AMD has scored wins across almost all of our benchmark suite. In anything embarrassingly parallel it rules the roost by a large margin (except for our one AVX-512 benchmark). Single threaded performance trails the high-frequency mainstream parts, but it is still very close. Even in memory sensitive workloads, an issue for the previous generation Threadripper parts, the new chiplet design has pushed performance to the next level. These new Threadripper processors win on core count, on high IPC, on high frequency, and on fast memory.

Is the HEDT Market Price Sensitive?

There are two areas where AMD will be questioned upon. First is the power, and why 280 W for the TDP? Truth be told, these are some of the most efficient desktop cores we have seen; it's just that AMD has piled a lot of them into a single processor. The other question is price.

Where Intel has retreated from the $2000 market, pushing its 18-core CPU back to $979, AMD has leapfrogged into that $1999 space with the 32-core and $1399 with the 24-core. This is the sort of price competition we have desperately needed in this space, although I have seen some commentary that AMD’s pricing is too high. The same criticism was leveled at Intel for the past couple of generations as well.

Now the HEDT market is a tricky one to judge. As one might expect, overall sales numbers aren’t on the level of the standard consumer volumes. Still, Intel has reported that the workstation market has a potential $10B a year addressable market, so it is still worth pursuing. While I have no direct quotes or data, I remember being told for several generations that Intel’s best-selling HEDT processors were always the highest core count, highest performance parts that money could buy. These users wanted off-the-shelf hardware, and were willing to pay for it – they just weren’t willing to pay for enterprise features. I was told that this didn’t necessarily follow when Intel pushed for 10 cores to $1979, when 8 cores were $999, but when $1979 became 18 cores, a segment of the market pushed for it. Now that we can get better performance at $1999 with 32 cores, assuming AMD can keep stock of the hardware, it stands to reason that this market will pick up interest again.

There is the issue of the new chipset, and TRX40 motherboards. Ultimately it is a slight negative that AMD has had to change chipsets and there’s no backwards compatibility. For that restriction though, we see an effective quadrupling of CPU-to-chipset bandwidth, and we’re going to see a wide range of motherboards with different controllers and support. There seems to be a good variation, even in the initial 12 motherboards coming to the market, with the potential for some of these companies to offer something off-the-wall and different. Motherboard pricing is likely to be high, with the most expensive initial motherboard, the GIGABYTE TRX40 Aorus Extreme, to be $849. Filling it up with memory afterwards won’t be cheap, either. But this does give a wide range of variation.

One of the key messages I’ve been saying this year is that AMD wants to attack the workstation market en mass. These new Threadripper processors do just that.

The Final Word

If you had told me three years ago that AMD were going to be ruling the roost in the HEDT market with high-performance 32-core processors on a leading-edge manufacturing node, I would have told you to lay off the heavy stuff. But here we are, and AMD isn’t done yet, teasing a 64-core version for next year. This is a crazy time we live in, and I’m glad to be a part of it.

AMD Third Generation Ryzen Threadripper

Price no object, the new Threadripper processors are breathing new life into the high-end desktop market. AMD is going to have to work hard to top this one. Intel is going to have to have a shift its design strategy to compete.

Many thanks to Gavin Bonshor for running the benchmarks, and Andrei Frumusanu for the memory analysis.

Gaming: F1 2018
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  • lobz - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    As well as the quality. Yes, dramatically.
  • dscott1414 - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    Totally awesome article. Could you correct the very last sentence?
  • icoreaudience - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    When will Anandtech display a modern compression algorithm within encoding tests ?
    Zstandard comes with a built-in benchmark compatible with multithreading, an ideal case to test threadripper !
  • Flying Aardvark - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    Fully patched Intel microcode and Windows?
  • yeeeeman - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    Probably yes since 10980xe performance is lower than 9980xe
  • blppt - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    I'm hesitant to take any of these mega-core intel benchmarks as accurate, though--- the 7980/9980 Geekbench 4 scores are laughably low (9980 should be north of 50K, not 30K, at the very least), so there's definitely something wrong with AT's setup for these cpus.

    Maybe the other benches are correct, but GB4 at least is messed up.
  • fackamato - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    Nope, mentioned in the article - BIOS update not available.

    So fully patched, the Intel results would be somewhat lower.
  • BrainWaveCC - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    I see a couple of "Threadripper 3950X" references where I expected to see "Threadripper 3960X" instead. For instance:

    "The interesting question here of course is, how is this UMA domain setup for the Threadripper 3950X and 3970X?"
  • dcmsnd - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    May i ask you guys how did you got 44s with 2990wx in Corona benchmark ? Im getting 41s with stock clocks (2933cl14 memory, Win1909, latest AMD drivers, latest bios)

    41 vs 44 is quite big difference in percentage for such small time frame.

    41s vs 34s AND 44s vs 34s is also a lot of difference.
  • Dug - Monday, November 25, 2019 - link

    I would like to know this too.

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