Look, people explain it better:
Super PI is single threaded, so its relevance as a measure of performance in the current era of multi-core processors is diminishing quickly. Therefore, wPrime has been developed to support multiple threaded calculations to be run at the same time so one can test stability on multi-core machines. Other multithreaded programs include: Hyper PI, IntelBurnTest, Prime95, Montecarlo superPI, OCCT or y-cruncher. Last but not least, while SuperPi is unable to calculate more than 32 million digits, and Alexander J. Yee & Shigeru Kondo were able to set a record of 10 Trillion 50 Digits of Pi using y-cruncher under a 2 x Intel Xeon X5680 @ 3.33 GHz - (12 physical cores, 24 hyperthreaded) computer on October 16, 2011[4] Super PI is much slower than these other programs, and utilizes inferior algorithms to them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_PI
i know all that matey.
they are all primarily cpu/system benchmarks where ram tweaks don’t mean much.
superpi 32m remains the standard for ram
speed overclock timing.
if you don’t want to submit a score
then it’s fine but we need some ryzen scores to put to bed some of the arguments in the memory forum regarding cas latency and secondary timings on ryzen platforms
not to try and take on the intel platforms.