By early review, of course, I meant Day 1 reviews which appears to be a hard no.
This is incorrect and not what I meant. It will be a hard yes if we get sampled. Our reviews will be up when the NDA period expires barring any unforeseen events.
To add further complications, Anandtech reported that X470 bios support may take until Jan for most boards so it won’t be something I’ll even be able to upgrade right away.
just getting information on Ryzen 3000 performance on older X470 boards is a mess - reviews are frequently from 2018 using 2000 series chips. Getting a comprehensive evaluation of performance and OC capability of a 3950 on a X470 appears to be rare to non existent - 3950 reviews tend to use top end (~$600ish+) X570 boards and very rarely mid range X570 boards.
the 3950 is on the QVL list for the Strix X470 gaming-F so asus says it will work - will it OC to a reasonable amount, who knows? If the 5950X will work will and OC to a reasonable amount is anyone’s guess. Sounds like I’ll get to experiment sometime in Jan.
Well, Ryzen 3000 series CPU's have similar power envelopes as the 2000 series does, excluding the 12 and 16 core models. However, the Strix X470 Gaming F has a 6+4 phase VRM that's beefy enough. As for overclocking, it can probably handle overclocking a 3950X or 5950X but it might leave some headroom on the table.
Keep in mind though, overclocking isn't really the massive concern it once was unless you are using it for multi-threaded workloads alone. Typically, you are better off leaving it to boost on its own. We've seen pretty sizeable performance losses when overclocking a 3900X or 3950X to 4.2GHz or so in single-threaded or lightly threaded applications. If you want to get into per CCX overclocking, that's a different story, but it's more work than an all core overclock is to achieve.
But again, the performance of X470 boards will be the same as X570 boards. You have to look at their VRM designs to try and determine if they are a good candidate for higher core count CPU's. At stock speeds, you are almost always good to go as long as we aren't talking about bottom of the barrel options such as some of the B350 boards out there.
I forgot about the BIOS though, we did get some X470 updates but I don't think it was for what I had on hand at the time. There wouldn't have been time to do it anyway. I think I had 7 or 8 days to do the testing and the write up. I literally finished two hours before the NDA expired.