Especially as Intel drank coffee lake in desperation already trying to fix their 10nm process, then drowned their sorrows in whiskey lake...
Anyway, as a PC enthusiast I don't really worry about power consumption in a high-end chip; we know it's going to draw a lot of power and it's going to run hot. If it doesn't at this stage in computing history, then something's basically wrong. It's like complaining that a newly-bought super sports car is loud and thirsty; you knew that would be the case before purchase, so why even bother over it?
It was different back in the 1990s when CPUs were measured in tens of millions of trannies only at most, not in the billions.
Now there's not even any way to reach max performance without hitting the thermal cap; the thermal cap IS the limit for max performance, without resorting to phase-change refridgeration cooling or something even more exotic.
But that's alright. Don't worry about it!