AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D: The sale starts tomorrow 

Apr 18, 2022 - 20:56
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AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D: The sale starts tomorrow 

AMD's "fastest gaming CPU in the world" will be available for purchase tomorrow. The exact time is not specified, however, it is normally advantageous to be speedy. It's uncertain how many units will make it to the market.

The Ryzen 7 5800X3D will be available tomorrow, Wednesday, at an unspecified price. AMD has preferred to standardize the test and launch dates, allowing customers to study Ryzen 7 5800X3D tests in peace.

Question mark on availability

We know from past experience that sales begin at 3 p.m., but we don't yet know what AMD and its partners have planned. It is probable that the first businesses will open at 3 p.m., with other e-tailers joining later.

We are currently asking AMD if there is a set timing for the April 20th market launch - however, we are anticipating 3 p.m. It is absolutely unknown what quantities AMD will be able to supply tomorrow and how high the yield with the 3D V cache will be.

Given the ability to run the new 8-core on previous 3-series AM4 mainboards (A320, B350, X370), it should be appealing to at least one upgrader. Also, AMD is unlikely to release another Ryzen 5000 with the strong L2 stack cache.

Mindfactory has traditionally been quite strong when it comes to AMD CPUs, so you might want to bookmark the AM4 landing page. Corresponding offers are also expected from Caseking, and Alternate should provide one or both 5800X3D models tomorrow. As a reminder, the recommended retail price is $449 USD, and the most recent Ryzen 5000 CPUs were virtually perfectly on the RRP.

We'll know tomorrow if this is also true for AMD's fastest gaming chip, or if one or the other requires a little fee. The Core i9-12900KS is Intel's rival for the title of "fastest gaming CPU." The fast but "thirsty" CPU is now available for 800 dollars.

Most recently, the faster Ryzen 5000 CPUs dropped in price again prior to the release of the 5800X3D, despite AMD not announcing new RRPs. It is reasonable to think that AMD wishes to define future performance classes more realistically; after all, AMD claims that the Ryzen 7 5800X3D should be 15% quicker than the Ryzen 9 5900X.