Ryzen 7 9800X3D vs. Core Ultra 9 285K: Which CPU should you buy? If you're building a gaming PC, there's no better choice than the AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D. It's the best gaming CPU you can buy for any amount of money, besting even the Intel Core Ultra 9 285K. At the time...
We’re in the middle of Intel vs AMD performance war, for the nth time. We now know the landscape and the confirmed release dates for the AMD Ryzen 7000 processors. On September 27th they’ll be available globally. The CPUs are Ryzen 9 7950X, Ryzen 9 7900X, Ryzen 7 7700X and Ry...
AMD Ryzen 5: Shines in multi-threaded tasks like video editing and 3D rendering due to its higher core count. Intel Core i5: Can handle content creation, but Ryzen 5 often offers better value and multi-core performance per dollar.
The more affordableAMD Ryzen 7 7700Xoffers a better balance between price and performance. But at this lower price-point, AMD’s chip is outpaced (in multi-thread tests) and outnumbered (in cores) by theIntel Core i7-12700K. And with the release of theIntel Core i7-13700K, which pack...
Industry experts soon confirmed AMD's claims about Ryzen, saying the new chips equal or better those offered by other manufacturers, including Intel, in many performance categories. Those competitors might disagree or offer competing test results (it's a very competitive business), but given AMD'...
AMD vs Intel: Which is better for gaming? This is where things get murky, because it's not just down to the speed of a processor. Show more As far as Intel CPUs are concerned, the fastest gaming chip is the Core i9-13900K, and you'd expect the Ryzen 9 7950X to be the best...
Early benchmark tests found Ryzen chips performed less well for some games than the best Intel Core i chips at the time. However, AMD executives and many game manufacturers predicted that continued performance tuning (by both AMD and game developers) would help Ryzen catch up quickly. In addi...
Which is better for gaming: Ryzen 5 or Ryzen 9? This depends on what you need to use the PC for. If it's for gaming alone, I'd recommend the AMD Rzyen 5. It has all the performance you need (and then some). Overclocking the speeds slightly should yield better results in games...
AMD’s older FX-8150 and Intel’s low-end Celeron J4125, in addition to Core i7-7700K, Ryzen 3950X, and Ryzen 7950X3D. Most of the focus will be on the single-threaded benchmark, because the multi-threaded benchmark appears to simply run the same workload on each logical core ...
I also tried to do it with the Ryzen Master program, but I get an error like "overclocking feature is disabled in BIOS", the program opens, but it only shows the values and these values do not appear as I changed them in the BIOS, but the base values. In the Cinebench ...