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I happen to disagree with you. Don't just say "Oh NVidia and Intel work better together," while I prefer to use Nvidia/Intel, that's a really hot take. My brother happens to use an i5-10400 and an 6650 XT and gets well beyond good performance for what he's got (It's a cheap build for a cheap college student). I have a GTX 1660 TI (I pray to the Lord every day that I get an upgrade) and an i5-9600KF, it plays most games well, but I guarantee that it will not run Jedi: Survivor. I don't use AMD CPUs because frankly, well, their naming system is a bit odd for someone whose used Intel since day 1.
I 'am' an intel fanboy cause I got that fat ca$h to pay for it(obv joke but in case some people out there are too daft to realize that I feel I gotta put a disclaimer here)
And I can confirm that AMD and Intel, whilst different companies, they do at least work together to allow their components to be freely and effortlessly interchanged and paired between each other with no performance impact of any kind.
Personally, I prefer Intel/Nvidia, and I find AMD/Ryzen to be less streamlined, less stabile, less aesthetically pleasing, and less performance overall. But they can easily co-exist in a rig with no negative effects whatsoever.
If your 20 years of experience brought you to this conclusion, you've wasted your time.
For someone who has been building PC's for "20 years" you seem to have a major lack of understanding of PC hardware, a simple google search will prove your point completely invalid.