That would be a monstrous MT score that desktop Zen 6 wont be touching without some hefty OC. However, I think that guesstimate could be a bit high unless its pulling 300W+, which, knowing Intel, would not be surprising at all. My guess would still be around 80-83K or so. In any case, this is exactly why I believe 24C Zen 6 will top out around 230-250W. 200W would just be leaving too much perf. on the table for AMD given what Intell will likely be doing.
I know I keep repeating this but I think as our projected MT compute numbers climb into the stratosphere the number of desktop users that will actually be using that compute grows smaller and smaller. Right now, with my 9950X and it's "measly" 16 cores and 32 threads there aren't a lot of cases where I'm fully loading all of those cores. Probably my biggest use case would be encoding video and running Pureraw (raw image processing) in the background while doing DAW work in the foreground. Enough compute has to be available to playback a mix without dropouts. But even with these apps, encoding is CPU based for me (I like the better efficiency/bit of CPU routines), PureRaw is primarily GPU, so there is generally some CPU cores left over for other tasks.
My point is that my "bottleneck" currently, if I were to complain, is ST performance, as most applications rely heavily on a couple cores, sometimes even one core. I notice even my HX370 based laptop scores ~20,000 CB R23 MT and allows me to multitask pretty effortlessly.
But, I DO realize I'm not everybody, there ARE definitely people out there who will be using applications that will load up all cores available (DC, Blender, etc..) or really hit the multitasking hard, but we're moving into an era where we have all the MT we need. We need more ST and/or software developers to start coding better for MT.
If Zen 6 can sustain a 10% frequency advantage over Zen 5 when lightly loaded, meaning 6.27GHz, then without any IPC improvement that is a win for me. Add in 5 or 10% for architecture and 8 additional cores and it's a winner. Of course if Intel can do the same then we have two great options as well have to look into power efficiency, thermals, pricing, motherboard features and support, etc...