Speaking of CPUs, the Weekly is a great showcase for the team to discuss some personal projects that may not have been planned as scheduled content - and sometimes the results are so fascinating, it opens the door to further research. Alex Battaglia primarily takes care of our PC coverage and recently upgraded his main workstation PC from a Ryzen 9 3900X (12 cores) to a new Ryzen 9 5950X (16 cores). Alex actually started out work on Digital Foundry using a Ryzen 7 1700 (eight cores) so has some history with AMD’s progression to market leadership and years of experience with the architecture. I’d highly recommend you check out his own personal benchmarks on the Ryzen 5000 upgrade: Alex tests pretty much every PC title on AMD Ryzen and Intel Core and in the process, uncovers the kind of performance issues that benchmarks rarely uncover. What makes this coverage so useful and interesting is just how much better Ryzen 5000 performs in game scenarios that previously gave AMD chips genuine problems. We’ve previously said that Ryzen 5000 is the real deal for gaming, but to pass Alex’s most demanding tests here validates the analysis - we’re looking at some stratospheric gen-on-gen gains here that won’t be explained by the extra cores alone. And yes, it may well inspire us to expand those specific tests to see how Intel compares too. Getting our Patreon supporters involved in the Weekly is a big part of what it’s about and there’s a range of great questions this week, from recommendations on connecting consoles to CRT displays to where we would work in the games business if we weren’t employed at Digital Foundry. Beyond that, has the mooted speed increase for game loading times actually arrived yet on PlayStation 5 and why are load times so close to Series X generally? Oh - and my colleagues tackle the big one: how do we handle the vitriol sometimes seen on social media, the spiteful criticisms, and supposed ‘debunks’?