Actually Dolphin is one of Ryzen's worst case scenarios, possibly because of how latency sensitive emulation is can be (and we know that latency is a bit of a weak point on the 1000-series Ryzen currently). Alternatively, this may be because Haswell and newer on the Intel side of things are weirdly fast at emulation (20-30% faster than Ivy Bridge) compared to most other workloads (5-10% faster than Ivy Bridge).
Take a look at the Dolphin 5.0 benchmark - Ryzen actually ends up consistantly performing worse than Haswell on a per-GHz basis, and this persists even when using much newer builds of Dolphin (though to a lesser degree).
However, the Ryzen 2200G and 2400G both launch in literally 5 days and should have some improvements to the latency of the memory subsystem, so it's very possible that they may end up with performance in Dolphin that exceeds the current 1000-series Ryzen CPUs.
Take a look at the Dolphin 5.0 benchmark - Ryzen actually ends up consistantly performing worse than Haswell on a per-GHz basis, and this persists even when using much newer builds of Dolphin (though to a lesser degree).
However, the Ryzen 2200G and 2400G both launch in literally 5 days and should have some improvements to the latency of the memory subsystem, so it's very possible that they may end up with performance in Dolphin that exceeds the current 1000-series Ryzen CPUs.
Dolphin 5.0 CPU benchmark
CPU: Pentium G3258 @ 4.5GHz 1.24v
GPU: Intel integrated
RAM: 4x4GB Corsair Vengence @ DDR3-1600
OS: Linux Mint of some variety + [VM] Win7 SP1 x64
CPU: Pentium G3258 @ 4.5GHz 1.24v
GPU: Intel integrated
RAM: 4x4GB Corsair Vengence @ DDR3-1600
OS: Linux Mint of some variety + [VM] Win7 SP1 x64
