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AMD's Ryzen 9 5900 would be the best gaming CPU if they existed and we could actually buy one | PC Gamer - hepnerthemannind

AMD's Ryzen 9 5900 would embody the best gaming CPU if they existed and we could actually steal one

AMD Ryzen 9 5000-series box
(Image credit: AMD)

Three months after the divinatory set in motion of the OEM-only Ryzen 9 5900 it looks like chips are actually finding their direction out into the wild. I'm not sure how, though, because I've checked across a variety of PC builders and none of them are offering the 12-core, 24-thread Ze 3 central processing unit.

Even so the only Ryzen 5000 CPUs you can grab right now are the Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 7 X-serial chips, with the Ryzen 9 5900X—our pick as the best CPU for gaming now—only easy for pre-ordering with no real estimation about when shipping might actually bump.

Maybe that's why the non-X version, a lower-clocked, lower-TDP part, has still not actually been released despite having a nominal launch date of January 12 this year. AMD Ryzen processors haven't been quite as thin on the ground as their Radeon GPU counterparts—which have whol but ghosted us gamers—but specifically the higher-spec Zen 3 chips take in been A rare as elephant eggs.

And if AMD bottom charge more for the 105W Ryzen 9 5900X than a 65W Ryzen 9 5900, why would it stingy the preciously few slices of Si IT can muster for the cheaper part? With a peak clock speed of 4.7GHz, versus the 5900X's 4.8GHz, information technology's not like there testament equal a whole host of 7nm chiplets that can't manage the rate of the X-series Zen 3 atomic number 14, just could be packed into a straight 5900 CPU.

Still, scheduled tweaker TUM_APISAK, has dug up a Userbenchmark listing for the OEM-only chip, which suggests that there are current processors out there. The performance listed by the infamous Userbenchmark (an unreliable site that unreasonably favours Intel CPUs) International Relations and Security Network't the important matter, IT's the fact that it's in in that respect at all.

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If there starts to be a day-after-day supply of the Ryzen 9 5900 into retail, allowing system builders to ship more 12-core AMD gaming PCs then that is objectively a good thing. The Zen 3 processors are excellent, and realistically the best play PCs are pre-built machines straightaway, if only because that's the only way you're going to get the latest hardware in your home.

This is the way the last generation of AMD chips went, and indeed the latest Genus Apus too, with the Ryzen 9 3900, the last-place-gen equivalent of this a la mode OEM-only part, even finding its fashio into laptops.

But it still sucks for the DIY market that AMD would only allow these 65W parts to puzzle out into the work force of OEMs. They'atomic number 75 getting all the good stuff these days. Building a gaming PC used to be entertaining, now it's a sorely frustrating, needlessly overpriced, ofttimes harrowing ordeal.

Dave James

Dave has been gaming since the days of Zaxxon and Lady Bug connected the Colecovision, and inscribe books for the Commodore Vic 20 (Death Race 2000!). He built his first gaming PC at the untoughened age of 16, and at last finished bug-fastening the Cyrix-based system around a year later. When he dropped it out of the windowpane. He first started writing for Official PlayStation Magazine and Xbox World many decades ago, then moved onto PC Data format full-metre, then PC Gamer, TechRadar, and T3 among others. Now atomic number 2's back, piece of writing about the nightmarish graphics card market, CPUs with more than cores than sense, gaming laptops hotter than the sun, and SSDs more capacious than a Cybertruck.

Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/amd-ryzen-9-5900-oem-only-sucks/

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