While I do have VCRs still (super cheap to find movies that never got released on DVD/Blu-ray for less than 50 cents at a thrift store) I haven't used a fax in ages. I am surprised that some folks today still rely on dot-matrix printers.
My MBP says it's from 2019 but 2020 is a year I'd love to forget! However, from my personal experience, I am always going to favor AMD Ryzen over garbage Intel. Intel does well for things like office software and browsing but they've never been a gamer's choice. I've tried many times and they're cheaper sometimes, but you get what you pay for. lackluster FPS on higher settings, having to buy twice as pricey GPU to make up for the lousy CPU, dealing with more heat issues, not having access to unlocked overclocking (all Ryzens are unlocked from the factory), Integrated graphics nightmares on laptops, etc.
The most recent attempt at gaming on an Intel was my Acer Ultrabook from like 2013. It had an Intel i5 quad-core, 500GB HDD, 4 GB RAM, and of course, Intel HD Graphics. Farming Sim '17 had to have the best stuff like anti-aliasing and higher resolutions turned off to be playable (at a horrid 15 FPS) and it was a pixelated mess. I despise jaggies, cannot play without AA on.
Portal 2 couldn't play well either, it lagged or felt like a slideshow, as did Euro Truck Simulator, or even Farming Simulator 2013. I tried Deer Avenger 4 (newer than 3D) and it crashed out the gate complaining about no shaders capability. This was a Windows 8 machine. It's now running Linux and acting as a Plex server and NAS, which it's at least capable of. If an i5 can't make up for the lousy GPU, I can't imagine an i3, which I've seen folks build gaming rigs with. That's gotta suck. NVidea GPUs must be running seriously into like 90 celcius just trying to make up for that lousy CPU.
My current setup is a Ryzen 3 and I've underclocked the CPU to 1.5GHz, the GPU is running at 1.2GHZ core clock with the memory clock at 2048 MHz (AMD Radeon 7500 GPU with dual fans) which is 1/2 what it was on default settings, which still nets me 60 FPS on Farming Simulator 19, Pure Farming 2018, Euro Truck Simulator 2 (all updates), and Fallout 4 with a ton of mods installed. AMD out-performs Intel 9 to 1. You'd have to max overclock everything on Intel and probably live with tons of fan noise (unless you want to spend far more on special fans that are quieter) just to get similar performance from even an i7, plus every pre-built I've seen with Intel is twice the price of the AMD.