Glad you found and resolved your problem in Bayonetta.
HPET usage is a contradicting mess on Ryzen so far.
So it seems for reliable local benchmarking without HPET the OC should be applied in BIOS and not changed at runtime. It's odd that TSC is not used (not a sufficient replacement?) to ensure that the irregular behavior with and without HPET don't happen.
Yes, it has been a mess.
It had been suggested that the difference between having HPET enabled or not was about 5% in benchmarks.
It seems like these huge performance drops may be an issue specific to
Bayonetta, as it also happens on my 2500K system as well if I force HPET on, but dropping from 60 FPS to below 30 FPS is not exactly slight.
In other games it does seem to have been maybe 5-10% but it generally seems to be helping most games where GPU utilization dropped below 100%.
Firewatch did not improve much, but
Dishonored 2 is a lot smoother now - so long as I restrict myself to 'high' quality textures and cap the game to 60 FPS.
It's not perfect but seems like it may actually be playable now.
The current version of Ryzen Master still tells me that I need to enable HPET so I don't think they have released the updated version yet.
Either that or the UEFI version for my system does not have the required AGESA update yet.
I don't think many people are going to be changing their overclocks after booting anyway - at least not people here that just want a system for work/games rather than overclocking being the hobby itself.
is there a list of ryzen compatibel 3200+ RAM? heard one should go with samsung. not so sure how to identify which chips manufactures are actually using?
Supposedly all Corsair 3600 or higher kits are all Samsung B-Die.
I bought a 16GB 3600C18 kit which was the cheapest available here, and it's worked perfectly with my Crosshair VI Hero using the 32x multiplier or at 3600MT/s using BCLK overclocking.
It does not cold boot at that speed though. 2666MT/s or 2933MT/s have had no issues cold booting.
so what exactly is going on with Ryzen? Every single review has incredibly conflicting results like Linustechtips and Paul's hardware having very different numbers with the only real change being the gpu. Some put it about on par and slightly above intel's current gen i5s (occasionally the i7 as well) while others completely cement it well below an i5 on all fronts for gaming. Are the Ryzen 5 cpus actually good?
HPET may be negatively affecting performance in some of these tests if they ran
Ryzen Master, which could explain the conflicting results.
So far, I'm pretty happy with my 1700X - it's amazing for non-gaming tasks, and pretty good for gaming too. (and better now)
But I've only been using a GTX 1070 and the performance may not hold up with a faster GPU.
The 6-core Ryzens seem like a pretty good deal compared to a 7600K to me.
I would find it very difficult to justify buying a 4c/4t CPU when you can get a faster 6c/12t CPU for less, and it doesn't seem to perform significantly worse in games with any of the tests I've seen, even if it's not always fastest.