When AMD launched Ryzen back in April 2017, the company made it a point to emphasize higher core counts than Intel was selling in the consumer market, with a Ryzen 7 1800X offering up to eight CPU cores, compared with four on the 7700K.
AMD has improved its performance and core counts more rapidly, but Intel is still shipping far more CPU cores per chip than it did four years ago.
All CPU core counts above that, up to 56 (not 64) cores are listed at 0.00 percent, so we stopped at 16.
If you want to see games using more CPU cores in the future, moving the needle on median CPU core count is how we’ll get there.