@edwin4625

10:34 was all I needed from this video.

@lovekush9103

Epyc:  servers
Threadripper: Workstation
Ryzen: PC

@tonycheng6478

Epyc: making games servers
Threadripper: making games
Ryzen: playing games

@KyleHarrisonRedacted

"There are no fewer than 3 brands of CPU's offered by team red"
Athlon: "I- ...... I mean.. I exist too.."

@Dreams_Of_Lavender

Epyc server CPUs also have to balance power consumption with performance. Fit as much power in the smallest box for the smallest energy cost.

@vh9network

Epyc: Server  (most expensive up to 128 cores )
Threadripper: HEDT / Workstation (expensive up to 64 cores )
Ryzen: Mainstream (premium cost up to 16 cores )
Athlon: Entry (affordable up to 2 cores )

@durdy911

As someone with all 3 platforms in a number of builds. My daily system (At Home) is actually a First Gen EPYC with dual 3090s, tripple monitor and a 4th display for multimedia consumption (movies, youtube). With Zenstates, I have the epyc chip OC and performance is between a 3950x and 5950x in cinebench and cpuz or faster if i push it up 200mhz more. Gaming, work, content creation is all child's play and it isn't the most powerful build I have. the best part is the expansion and 8 channel ram. I have 16 nvme drives in 4 asus hyper m.2 all in raid0 for accelerating whatever workload and also for a few of my games. granted, even if my games are run off any of the 4 8TB HDDs, its stil feels like they run off an NVMe since i use 128GB out of my 256GB ram for primocache along with one of the 2 nvme drives connected to the motherboard itself. So Yeah. There's no way you can have this much power with regular ryzen or intel consumer gaming platforms.

@Driftuner

"a Ryzen 7 is so good for gaming that it wont bottleneck even the best GPUs".......Nvidia RTX 3090 enters the chat...

@VirendraBG

0:36
4:49
Which PC case is this?

@varadpawar8357

thanks this helped a lot. i was going to buy EPYC, 128GB RAM,RTX 3080 to play NFS Most Wanted(2005) . So now i bought core 2 quad(refurbished), 2gb ram to play it (just kidding) Nice video

@fredericmercier-leboeuf9815

Got ryzen 5 1600 for 2+ year now. Still very powerfull. My GTX 1060 AMP is the buttleneck at this moment. Next upgrade for my PC is a 650W psu. With all the fan/led/USB port used, 500w is not enoug anymore. I have 24 GB Ram 2 8GB/2 4 GB. 1 tb hdd, 4tb external disk Drive and 240 GB SSD for Windows. Overall im very impress.

@ChaseMMD

Great video. But the cache memory claim is completely false. Especially if you look at zen 2 vs zen 3. Most of what they did was cache rework and got 19% ipc increase. Clearly you folks don't understand fundamentals of how cache works and how much slower your games would be if they had to refer to memory every single time rather than have onboard cache. A lot of processing cycles is waiting on RAM to start processing. I dont want to bash but want to delude from what is important to know. Otherwise great video!

@prismoth

the difference: i can afford ryzen

@fadofficialmusic

I literally forgot the spelling for epic
After I saw the epyc !

@BibleProphecyMadeClear

You should state that your looking at this from a gamers perspective instead of an all-around view. Thank you for the video :)

@CalaisRider

Thank you for taking the time and posting.  I feel this is a great overview of the various skews of AMD CPUs.

@idontknoah

Threadripper: ripping wallets
Eypc: Epycly expensive

@Acary77

Still an underrated channel. Almost to 100k subs though.

@ImranHaider

time: 5:44   This is untrue. Many game engines are developed with data oriented design so they can make the best use of the CPU cache.

@HarpCali8o5

Best description I've found. Easy to follow. Thank you 😊