I recently built a budget gaming system with a AMD FX-8320e Vishera processor. I know the Vishera CPU's are really unpopular but they get you some good bang for your buck. I paid $150 for mine, and it's the best CPU I have ever owned - I love it. I know an I7 would be better, but I don't want to shell out over $300 for my CPU.
While I know an I7 would beat the pants of of a Vishera in single-threaded applications, I wonder how they compare for multi-threaded applications? The 8 integer cores in the Vishera have to count for something. The annoying thing about benchmark sites is they want to reduce a piece of technology down to a single number, which isn't always accurate. I would love to see a site that does separate single-threaded and multi-threaded benchmarks.
IMO it's a shame that AMD gave up on desktop CPU's. The Piledriver architecture is a refinement of Bulldozer, which was a completely new architecture built from the ground up. Of course it won't compare to an I7 at launch - the Intel Core architecture was introduced in 2006 and has had dozens of generations of architecture improvements since then. I bet if AMD had continued to improve upon Bulldozer it would match or surpass the Intel Core architecture within a few more generations. But we will never know now.
I can understand why they made the decision to go all-in to APU's - there is a strong mobile market today, with cell phones, tablets, and laptops that could all benefit from a single chip with both CPU and Graphics on-board. However gamers would never buy an APU for a desktop - they are constantly upgrading their graphics for playing games and in order to upgrade the graphics in an APU you would have to buy a whole new chip! which is too expensive and too much hassle (removing and replacing the cooler on your APU just to do a graphics upgrade... seriously?) which is why to me, it's like throwing in the towel and waving the white flag on the desktop market.
Owning the last generation of AMD CPU kind of makes me feel like I own a piece of history. I really wonder how it would have turned out, if they had kept improving on it for another 9 or 10 years like Intel has for the Core architecture.