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Edited December 14, 2023
at 01:19 AM
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AMD Ryzen 7 5700X 8-core 16-thread Desktop Processor without cooler - 8 cores & 16 threads - 3.4 GHz- 4.6 GHz CPU Speed - 36MB Total Cache - PCIe 4.0 Ready - Without Cooler
AMD Ryzen 7 5700X 8-core 16-thread Desktop Processor without cooler AMD Ryzen 7 5700X 8-core 16-thread Desktop Processor without cooler POWER. PERFORMANCE. EFFICIENCY. All are at your fingertips due to the technological innovation of the 7nm "Zen 3" core found inside AMD Ryzen™ 5000 Series processors POWERFUL DESKTOP PROCESSORS AMD Ryzen 5000 Series desktop processors power the next generation of demanding games and dominate any multithreaded task. In addition, with AMD Ryzen 5000 G-Series desktop processors, you get incredible integrated graphics in a desktop processor. THE LATEST TECHNOLOGIES AMD Ryzen 5000 Series processors come with the full suite of Ryzen processor technologies designed to elevate your PC's processing power. BUILD WITH CONFIDENCE AMD Ryzen 5000 Series desktop processors are drop-in ready with a BIOS update on AMD 500, 400, and 300 Series motherboards.
Manufacturer Advanced Micro Devices, Inc
Manufacturer Part Number 100-100000926WOF
Brand Name AMD
Product Line Ryzen 7
Product Model 5700X
Product Name AMD Ryzen 7 5700X 8-core 16-thread Desktop Processor without cooler
Product Condition New
Package Type Retail
Product Type Processor
Technical Information Processor ManufacturerAMD
Processor Core Octa-core (8 Core)
Clock Speed 3.40 GHz
Overclocking Speed 4.60 GHz
L1 Cache 512 KB
L2 Cache 4 MB
L3 Cache 32 MB
Processor Technology 7 nm
Processor Threads 16
Processor Socket AM4
Power DescriptionThermal Design Power 65 W
Environmental Conditions Cooler Type Not included
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https://www.ebay.com/itm/125522220531
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You could potentially sell your 3700x also and put all the savings towards a GPU which would be noticeable in gaming for sure. For gaming at lower resolutions, and if you want the most FPS, you would want to go with 5800x3d. But the 5800x3d is double the price of the 5700x, so for a casual gamer and or playing at higher resolutions it may not be your best option.
There are a lot of great comparisons on youtube of games and productivity benchmarks at various resolutions for 3700x vs 5700x vs 5800x3d.
If you are building from scratch, for sure go with AM5 platform. The cpu prices aren't much higher and you will get drop in upgrades for future CPUs. If you are lucky enough to live near a microcenter, they have a great bundle for $460 for 7800x3d, 32gb and motherboard. Or if on a budget you could get the 7600 bundle for a lot less and upgrade the cpu in a year or two.
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You understand you need to build a new PC with new motherboard, ram, etc.. right?
Which also means you need a copy of new OS as well.
The question you have to answer is not "is AMD 5700x worth upgrading from Intel 2500K?"
Because it is when talking about only CPU, but the real question you have to ask yourself is:
"Is it worth building a new PC system that is old platform(AM4) already?"
No, I wouldn't plan to upgrade at the current slow pace of innovation for a long time. The real question is if there has been any meaningful progress in the last ten years for me to sink money into a new system. Will I even notice a difference in day to day usage? You have not convinced me that I will.
Is it worth returning the 5600g from my Newegg bundle just for a bit of performance uplift with an a750?
Running -30 all core curve optimizer with +200 core clock.
Seeing 4850mhz in game.