Zen 3! AMD Back on TOP

AMD's Ryzen 5000 Series: A New Era in Computing

AMD's latest lineup of Ryzen processors has been officially announced, and they are set to revolutionize the computing landscape. With their sleek designs, impressive performance, and competitive pricing, these CPUs are sure to give Intel a run for its money.

One of the standout features of the Ryzen 5000 series is its boost clock speed. The top-of-the-line Ryzen 9 5900X boasts a base clock speed of 3.7 GHz and a boost clock speed of 4.8 GHz, making it one of the fastest consumer-grade CPUs available today. The Ryzen 7 5800X also features a impressive performance with a base clock speed of 3.8 GHz and a boost clock speed of 4.7 GHz. Meanwhile, the Ryzen 5 5600X rounds out the lineup with a base clock speed of 3.7 GHz and a boost clock speed of 4.6 GHz.

In terms of memory, all three CPUs feature 36 megabytes of L3 cache, which is significantly more than Intel's offerings at this price point. The Ryzen 5 5600X also boasts an additional 35 megabytes of L2 cache, making it a strong contender in the budget gaming segment.

One notable aspect of the Ryzen 5000 series is that only the Ryzen 5 and below processors will come with a CPU cooler included in the box. This means that users who opt for the higher-end Ryzen 7 and Ryzen 9 processors will need to purchase their own cooling solution separately.

The launch date for these CPUs has been set for November 5th, but AMD's teaser slide showed the upcoming big Navi Radeon RX 6000 series with what appeared to be the RX 6900 XT. This suggests that the performance of the Ryzen 5000 series may be competitive with NVIDIA's top-tier GPUs, such as the GeForce RTX 3080.

In a surprising move, AMD threw up a slide showing Ryzen 9 5950X gaming performance compared to an i9-10900K, with AMD coming out on top by anywhere from zero to 11 percent. This is a significant blow to Intel's claims of being better for gaming.

While some may argue that Intel still has its strengths in the gaming segment, it seems that AMD's Ryzen 5000 series may be giving them a run for their money. With their impressive performance, competitive pricing, and sleek designs, these CPUs are sure to be a hit with gamers and content creators alike.

In conclusion, AMD's Ryzen 5000 series is shaping up to be an exciting new era in computing. With its impressive performance, competitive pricing, and sleek designs, these CPUs are sure to give Intel a run for its money. Whether you're building a budget gaming PC or a high-end workstation, the Ryzen 5000 series has something to offer everyone.

If you're interested in learning more about AMD's Ryzen 5000 series or would like to get hands-on with one of these CPUs, be sure to check out our related videos and content. From budget builds to reviews and benchmarks, we've got everything you need to know about the latest and greatest in computing technology.

"WEBVTTKind: captionsLanguage: enit's finally happening this is it amd is poised to overtake intel on all facets of performance in the consumer cpu space the time has come supposedly my name is chris this is coalition gaming and today i'll be your computer technician real quick if you're new around here and are into pc hardware tech gaming streaming tips tutorials news and reviews then you're in the right place hit that subscribe button and that bell so you don't miss a single upload uh also i stream to twitch every friday at 8pm pacific so feel free to stop by drop a follow and talk some tech with me anyways let's get to the video so amd just announced their zen 3 ryzen 5000 series cpus the big push seems to be lowering latency between the cores and unifying the l3 cache so it's properly shared amongst the cores and chiplets as well as improvements to the pre-fetching execution engine branch predictor micro up cache front end and load slash store according to amd these all contribute to the ipc improvements however it might also sound like they're all like they're trying to move away from the chiplet design especially with the a core cpus and lower the recent 4700g and 4750g having been confirmed to be single monolithic die sort of give credit to this idea this results in faster infinity fabric speeds as well which contribute to lowering of latency but this is just me speculating since the ccx's still appear to be 8 cores and in use in the 5900x and 5950x so i'm hoping they speed up the infinity fabric speed either way but it doesn't seem like there are infinity fabric updates happening with the chiplet design still in use one major update that's pretty huge is that amd is unifying the cache design of the ccx's where previously each set of four cores shared 16 megabytes of l3 cache and required communication between each set of four cores and their cache to properly share that cache in that design the new zen3 design takes all eight cores in the ccx and has them sharing a giant 32 megabyte l3 cache this way every core has direct access to the cache and latencies can be significantly reduced resulting in improved performance that improve performance you may ask it's a supposed ipc increase of 19 with zen 3 over zen 2. that's pretty significant if true while the benchmarks they showed lack any kind of legend and simply use the word performance which left a lot to be desired the numbers at least looked impressive with the 5900x shadow of the tomb raider showed a 28 performance improvement over the 3900 xt they then went on to give an average gaming performance improvement at 1080p of 26 percent again pretty significant if true especially for a 1080p high refresh gamer like me one thing that amd was very proud about was that these cpus are supposedly the first desktop processors to break 600 in cinebench r20 single core testing that's pretty crazy considering intel was always the single core score king looks like they may be losing their crown there were also a bunch of charts shown for productivity performance improvements but since amd was already the top dog here and now they're just beating themselves i feel like it's a little less important to cover also they're mostly comparing the 5900x and 5950x 12 core and 16 core cpus to the 10 core intel which is kind of an unfair comparison in a way of course the higher core count cpus will look better in multi-threaded productivity applications compared to a cpu with less cores i'll leave a link in the description to an article that does cover these points if that's what you're interested in interested in looking at so with all that said here are the cpus they announced first the top dog the ryzen 9 5950x 105 watt tdp 16 core 32 thread with a boost of 4.9 gigahertz base clock wasn't shown but don't get too hyped for 4.9 gigahertz as that is likely a very short duration single core boost that will likely not occur very much this applies for the boost to all the cpus by the way 72 megabytes of cash on this one and the price for this is 7.99 next up is the ryzen 9 5900x also 105 watt tdp 12 cores 24 threads base clock of 3.7 gigahertz boost clock of 4.8 gigahertz 70 megabyte cache not sure why it's 70 versus 72 but oh well price on this one 549 dollars next is the ryzen 7 5800 x also 105 watt tdp a core 16 thread with the base of 3.8 gigahertz and a boost of 4.7 36 megabytes of cash here and price would be 449. then lastly the ryzen 5 5600 x 65 watt tdp six cores 12 threads with the base of 3.7 gigahertz and a boost of 4.6 35 megabyte of cash here if my notes are right and this one has a price of 2.99 at a glance these seem more expensive than previous gen what's worse is that only the ryzen 5 and below cpus will be coming with a cpu cooler in the box the ryzen 7 and ryzen 9s no longer will include a cooler which sort of lowers their value and sort of looks bad as well because of their relatively higher prices can't win them all i guess i like reusing those race prisms on ryzen 3 and ryzen 5 builds but you know oh well hopefully non-x or lower numbered variants come out with better pricing and similar performance a ryzen 7 5700 and 5700x at 349 and 399 respectively would be pretty great as well as a ryzen 5 5600 for 200 249. the ryzen 9s well i kind of expected those to be pricey the top dogs always are something that 400 series chipset users may not like however is that a beta bios availability to support these cpus is looking like january 2021 so while amd did go back on canceling zen 3 support on 400 series boards it seems like it would also be delayed so that they can they can i don't know maybe get it done right or better maybe it's not a big deal though because if this launch goes like other launches in 2020 have these will be very difficult to get until next year 500 series chipsets should be seeing updated bios files pushed out leading up to release though speaking of release and availability amd says these will be available november 5th ah real quick something i forgot to mention in the main part of the recording was that the uh amd actually teased the upcoming big navi radeon rx 6000 series with what appeared to be the uh 6900 xt i think it was and they showed a gaming benchmark of it with the 5950 xt 16 core cpu and uh long story short the for the performance it was getting looks like it might actually be a pretty good match for the 3080 now the platform it's on is obviously an untested platform as far as the consumers are aware because we don't know how well that cpu really does yet um but you know let's just take things as we get it it's looking like it might be a competitor to the 3080 priced less than the 3080 and if it comes anywhere close to the performance of that 3080 it's a win-win situation really now for the final supposed nail in the coffin to intel amd threw up a slide showing ryzen 9 5950x gaming performance compared to an i9 10 900k showing amd to be anywhere from zero to 11 percent better with intel holdouts steadfastly proclaiming that intel is still better for games the jig may finally be up hopefully you found this video useful entertaining informational or any of that stuff if you like this video you know what to do drop a comment down below and uh let's continue the conversation or hit me up on twitter discord instagram while i'm live on twitch maybe or any of that everything is linked down in the description below and uh that does it for me today my name is chris and i've been your computer technician bye we got a lot of related videos right over here so you might want to click one check one out click one check one out yes yes rtx 3080 review bunch of 3080 content budget builds something anything click one okay byeit's finally happening this is it amd is poised to overtake intel on all facets of performance in the consumer cpu space the time has come supposedly my name is chris this is coalition gaming and today i'll be your computer technician real quick if you're new around here and are into pc hardware tech gaming streaming tips tutorials news and reviews then you're in the right place hit that subscribe button and that bell so you don't miss a single upload uh also i stream to twitch every friday at 8pm pacific so feel free to stop by drop a follow and talk some tech with me anyways let's get to the video so amd just announced their zen 3 ryzen 5000 series cpus the big push seems to be lowering latency between the cores and unifying the l3 cache so it's properly shared amongst the cores and chiplets as well as improvements to the pre-fetching execution engine branch predictor micro up cache front end and load slash store according to amd these all contribute to the ipc improvements however it might also sound like they're all like they're trying to move away from the chiplet design especially with the a core cpus and lower the recent 4700g and 4750g having been confirmed to be single monolithic die sort of give credit to this idea this results in faster infinity fabric speeds as well which contribute to lowering of latency but this is just me speculating since the ccx's still appear to be 8 cores and in use in the 5900x and 5950x so i'm hoping they speed up the infinity fabric speed either way but it doesn't seem like there are infinity fabric updates happening with the chiplet design still in use one major update that's pretty huge is that amd is unifying the cache design of the ccx's where previously each set of four cores shared 16 megabytes of l3 cache and required communication between each set of four cores and their cache to properly share that cache in that design the new zen3 design takes all eight cores in the ccx and has them sharing a giant 32 megabyte l3 cache this way every core has direct access to the cache and latencies can be significantly reduced resulting in improved performance that improve performance you may ask it's a supposed ipc increase of 19 with zen 3 over zen 2. that's pretty significant if true while the benchmarks they showed lack any kind of legend and simply use the word performance which left a lot to be desired the numbers at least looked impressive with the 5900x shadow of the tomb raider showed a 28 performance improvement over the 3900 xt they then went on to give an average gaming performance improvement at 1080p of 26 percent again pretty significant if true especially for a 1080p high refresh gamer like me one thing that amd was very proud about was that these cpus are supposedly the first desktop processors to break 600 in cinebench r20 single core testing that's pretty crazy considering intel was always the single core score king looks like they may be losing their crown there were also a bunch of charts shown for productivity performance improvements but since amd was already the top dog here and now they're just beating themselves i feel like it's a little less important to cover also they're mostly comparing the 5900x and 5950x 12 core and 16 core cpus to the 10 core intel which is kind of an unfair comparison in a way of course the higher core count cpus will look better in multi-threaded productivity applications compared to a cpu with less cores i'll leave a link in the description to an article that does cover these points if that's what you're interested in interested in looking at so with all that said here are the cpus they announced first the top dog the ryzen 9 5950x 105 watt tdp 16 core 32 thread with a boost of 4.9 gigahertz base clock wasn't shown but don't get too hyped for 4.9 gigahertz as that is likely a very short duration single core boost that will likely not occur very much this applies for the boost to all the cpus by the way 72 megabytes of cash on this one and the price for this is 7.99 next up is the ryzen 9 5900x also 105 watt tdp 12 cores 24 threads base clock of 3.7 gigahertz boost clock of 4.8 gigahertz 70 megabyte cache not sure why it's 70 versus 72 but oh well price on this one 549 dollars next is the ryzen 7 5800 x also 105 watt tdp a core 16 thread with the base of 3.8 gigahertz and a boost of 4.7 36 megabytes of cash here and price would be 449. then lastly the ryzen 5 5600 x 65 watt tdp six cores 12 threads with the base of 3.7 gigahertz and a boost of 4.6 35 megabyte of cash here if my notes are right and this one has a price of 2.99 at a glance these seem more expensive than previous gen what's worse is that only the ryzen 5 and below cpus will be coming with a cpu cooler in the box the ryzen 7 and ryzen 9s no longer will include a cooler which sort of lowers their value and sort of looks bad as well because of their relatively higher prices can't win them all i guess i like reusing those race prisms on ryzen 3 and ryzen 5 builds but you know oh well hopefully non-x or lower numbered variants come out with better pricing and similar performance a ryzen 7 5700 and 5700x at 349 and 399 respectively would be pretty great as well as a ryzen 5 5600 for 200 249. the ryzen 9s well i kind of expected those to be pricey the top dogs always are something that 400 series chipset users may not like however is that a beta bios availability to support these cpus is looking like january 2021 so while amd did go back on canceling zen 3 support on 400 series boards it seems like it would also be delayed so that they can they can i don't know maybe get it done right or better maybe it's not a big deal though because if this launch goes like other launches in 2020 have these will be very difficult to get until next year 500 series chipsets should be seeing updated bios files pushed out leading up to release though speaking of release and availability amd says these will be available november 5th ah real quick something i forgot to mention in the main part of the recording was that the uh amd actually teased the upcoming big navi radeon rx 6000 series with what appeared to be the uh 6900 xt i think it was and they showed a gaming benchmark of it with the 5950 xt 16 core cpu and uh long story short the for the performance it was getting looks like it might actually be a pretty good match for the 3080 now the platform it's on is obviously an untested platform as far as the consumers are aware because we don't know how well that cpu really does yet um but you know let's just take things as we get it it's looking like it might be a competitor to the 3080 priced less than the 3080 and if it comes anywhere close to the performance of that 3080 it's a win-win situation really now for the final supposed nail in the coffin to intel amd threw up a slide showing ryzen 9 5950x gaming performance compared to an i9 10 900k showing amd to be anywhere from zero to 11 percent better with intel holdouts steadfastly proclaiming that intel is still better for games the jig may finally be up hopefully you found this video useful entertaining informational or any of that stuff if you like this video you know what to do drop a comment down below and uh let's continue the conversation or hit me up on twitter discord instagram while i'm live on twitch maybe or any of that everything is linked down in the description below and uh that does it for me today my name is chris and i've been your computer technician bye we got a lot of related videos right over here so you might want to click one check one out click one check one out yes yes rtx 3080 review bunch of 3080 content budget builds something anything click one okay bye\n"