The price jump was +8% for 24 cores and +11% for 32 cores. It wasn't really a "huge" jump. The reason it seems so much more expensive is because the cheaper SKUs were simply removed instead of replaced.
And entry-level TR was never $250. That's the EOL "we need to dump old inventory" fire sale price.
Yeah, but everybody expected a price drop with new gen, instead we got overpriced TRX40 (compared to high-end x399) and the same number of cores for more $. I get it those cores are much more powerful, but it's still an untypical situation. 2990WX will probably stay at the same level as there is no other choice for x399 owners anyway.
I agree, but as an x399 2990WX will be the end of the line and therefore no reason to lower the prices, like was the case with 4790k. 2990WX loses many benchmarks to 3900x, 3960x should demolish it most of the time.
Reinforcement learning might be a good use case for 2990WX.
It seems like people benefit from the higher clocks and lower latencies from the 16-core 2950x. I pretty much consider the 2950x to be the end-of-the-line for typical use cases... with the 2990wx only really used for render-boxes.
> Reinforcement learning might be a good use case for 2990WX.
Hmm, the 2990wx is better than the 2950x for that task, but the 3960x has 256-bit AVX2 vectors. Since the 2990wx only has 128-bit AVX2 vectors, I would place my bets on the cheaper, 24-core 3960x instead.
Doubling the SIMD-width in such a compute-heavy problem would be more important than the +12 cores that the 2990wx offers.
EDIT: The 3960x also fixes the latency issues that the 2990wx has, so its acceptable to use the 3960x in general-use case scenarios (aka: video games). The latency-issue made the 2990wx terrible at playing video games.
Yeah, no one is buying these HEDTs for "purely" gaming tasks, but any "creative" individual who does video rendering during the week, but plays Counterstrike on the weekend, needs a compromise machine that handles both high-core counts AND high-clock speeds for the different workloads.
> but everybody expected a price drop with new gen
No they weren't. I certainly wasn't. There was no reason at all to believe TR3 would be a price drop. Ryzen 3000 wasn't and neither was X570. If the mainstream platform parts didn't get a price drop why would the HEDT halo products? Particularly since new generations are almost never price drops, especially without any competition?
> instead we got overpriced TRX40 (compared to high-end x399)
X399 at launch ranged from $340 to $550. TRX40 at launch ranges from $450 to $700. Yes there was a bump there, but there is also overlap in pricing, too. You are getting PCI-E 4.0 instead along with a substantially higher spec'd chipset. You're also getting in general a higher class of board quality & construction. Similar to the X570 vs. X470 comparison.
> but it's still an untypical situation
Untypical in that they are actually a lot faster generation over generation, sure. Untypical in that they are priced similarly or slightly more? Not really. That's been status quo for the last decade or so. The company with the halo product sets the price. The company in 2nd place prices cuts in response. AMD has the halo, they were never going to price cut it.
Top-end TRX40 is around $1000 (Zenith II). That's almost double of Zenith Extreme x399; x399 had 16-phase VRMs as well in later releases; PCIe 4's usefulness is questionable (basically just for 100 Gigabit networking right now).
For x399 users TRX40 is underwhelming as it just feels like "pay for the same stuff again" if you want to use new CPUs.
Halo boards are always stupidly overpriced. X570 tops out at $1000, too. That's a terrible way to judge a platform's costs.
> PCIe 4's usefulness is questionable (basically just for 100 Gigabit networking right now).
Not true at all. It's more bandwidth to the chipset, meaning you can run double the PCI 3.0 gear off of that chipset than you could before without hitting a bottleneck (well actually 4x since the number of lanes to the chipset also doubled...). That means more SATA ports. More M.2 drives. More USB 3.2 gen 2x2.
> For x399 users TRX40 is underwhelming as it just feels like "pay for the same stuff again" if you want to use new CPUs.
Not disagreeing on that but that's very different from TRX4 is "overpriced vs X399." Just because it's not worth upgrading to the new platform doesn't make the new platform overpriced vs. the old one.
> It's more bandwidth to the chipset, meaning you can run double the PCI 3.0 gear off of that chipset than you could before without hitting a bottleneck
Not necessarily the case in practice since that would require some sort of chipset or active converter exposed by the motherboard to mux 3.0 lanes to bifurcated 4.0 lanes. A 3.0 x4 device still needs those four lanes to get full speed so in a PCI-e 4.0 setting you’ll actually be using up four of the PCIe 4.0 lanes, but inefficiently.
And entry-level TR was never $250. That's the EOL "we need to dump old inventory" fire sale price.