ill post results probably tomorrow. One thing i can say for sure is that Hardware Unboxed was spot on with the memory, dual rank is the way to go, everything that is 3200 or faster will perform too close to each other, not worth the money. Dual rank, or use 4 single rank sticks. I only had one dual rank 3200 kit, and for a short while today, after that i started using 2, 2x8 DDR4-3600 kits, that was the faster combination, faster than DDR4-4000 single rank. Oh, DDR4-4000 is the max you can use, after that it goes async and performance drops.
As for overcloking, 2300 is the max i could get stable, and to be honest it is not worth it either, just as with the ram, it gives very little gains, but it really helps on some games that drop below 30, like Cyberpunk.
The rest is petty much the same as always, relive is not enabled on adrenaline control panel and at this point i dont think it is ever coming back, it was taken away like what? 2 years ago?
One thing i did discover, and i cant belive im discovering right now, is how the VRAM works, AMD always have the 2GB dynamic regardless of what you set on the bios, this i think we all know, the part i did not know is that that comes ON TOP of wharever you set on the bios, so if you set 512MB on bios (thats the default auto value for Asus), it is 512MB+2GB and this is a non issue most of the time, yet today a discovered a exception with two games that work in exact opposite ways, RDR2 and Jedi Fallen Order, JFO was refusing to use the dynamic vram it was only using the 512MB what resulted on on textures not loading properly. I fixed this by setting manually 2GB on bios.
RDR2 works the opposite way, it only ever uses the dynamic vram, so if you set 2GB manually, it is never used and that memory is wasted. And that causes it to crash on the benchmark with 16GB when attemping to use more than 13GB of ram.
As for manually choosing the VRAM, on Asus enabling resize bar(i think it is about enabling "Above 4G Decoding" than bar itself) allows more than 2G of VRAM to be selected, up to 50% of total ram, 8G is avalible with 16GB RAM and 16G with 32GB RAM, selecting 8GB is actually very funny because RDR2 would use NONE OF IT, and Shadow of the Tomb Raider loads up to 6GB!!!
And yeah, 8GB vram, i also ran the eth miner on it, luckily, it is a crappy 4 mh/s on the faster 4xDDR4-3600 configuration with the Vega 7 at 2300mhz.
as a bonus ill leave here the screen of Shadow of the Tomb Raider using 6GB VRAM on the APU.