I'm not sure I understand your premise. How am I saving money by upgrading to Ryzen? Not trying to be a jerk, just genuinely curious.
Ryzen is definitely a good deal for what you're getting, but all of the announced parts are somewhere between the high-end of mainstream and the low-end of HEDT CPU prices. That's more than most people, even many gamers, usually pay for a CPU. I guess if you were planning to upgrade to a new Intel HEDT system, then Ryzen is now a cheaper option, but that's a tiny, tiny, minority of people.
You can build an entire Ryzen 1700/X system for the cost of just the Intel 6900K CPU. For a workstation build, that is yuuuuge. I've been hitting the limits of my 4C/8T for a while now so the 1800X was a day 1 preorder for me.
Those 6900k prices are going to come down, though. Some are saying they're gonna be around $700 soon. I get your point, but let's face it, people on an i7-7700k budget aren't saving much. Total system cost for the 1800x is actually higher than the 7700k, which is appropriate since you're getting so much more for your money.
I'm not saving any money at all. What I wanted to do was go Bristol Ridge -> Raven Ridge, and both would have been sub $200 CPUs (probably). But they wouldn't sell me Bristol Ridge so . . . whatever.
Next up, Vega?
Even with Intel's incoming response on comparable parts, what will you do with the money you save when upgrading to Ryzen?
Better components? Leave it in the bank? Buy a mocka latte?
You can build an entire Ryzen 1700/X system for the cost of just the Intel 6900K CPU. For a workstation build, that is yuuuuge. I've been hitting the limits of my 4C/8T for a while now so the 1800X was a day 1 preorder for me.
Yes, price of 6900K is indeed ridiculous, however it makes me curious to know, how you would describe 1723-1743 dollars for 6950x?6900K price is just ridiculus.