If we consider the clock speed as the main characteristic of the central processor, then Intel has a definite advantage here: its CPUs operate at a frequency of over 5.0 GHz – albeit not with all active cores. In this regard, the current Ryzen are lagging behind, but with the release of Ryzen 6000 AMD will still take the 5 GHz line.

Reportedly, the frequencies of the Ryzen 6000 (codenamed Warhol) will noticeably rise in comparison with the Ryzen 5000 and will reach (and in some cases are likely to exceed) the 5.0 GHz threshold. This, along with other architectural improvements (debuting Zen 3 Refresh), bodes well for a significant performance boost. At the same time, power consumption should not grow much, since the CPUs will be manufactured using a 6-nanometer process technology, and the AM4 version will remain completely.
The Ryzen 6000 is expected to be released later this year, and the 5nm Ryzen 7000 (codenamed Raphael) will debut a year later – with support for DDR5 memory.
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