HeadlinesBriefing favicon HeadlinesBriefing.com

AMD's Ryzen 5800X3D 10th Anniversary Edition Could Extend AM4 Systems

Ars Technica •
×

AMD appears to be preparing a Ryzen 5800X3D 10th Anniversary Edition that could breathe new life into aging Socket AM4 builds. The chip originally launched as AMD's first consumer X3D processor, featuring stacked L3 cache for gaming performance gains.

However, the 5800X3D carries notable compromises compared to standard Ryzen processors. Clock speeds run several hundred MHz lower than the regular 5800X, and overclocking support is limited. For budget-conscious builders, a regular eight-core Ryzen 7 from the 5700 or 5800 series might deliver better overall value.

The re-release targets enthusiasts with high-end GPUs who want to avoid DDR5 upgrade costs amid current market conditions. While AMD hasn't confirmed pricing, an Indian retailer listed the chip around $310, potentially undercutting used market prices of $450-500. This positions the CPU as a budget-friendly bridge for extending Socket AM4 systems before inevitable obsolescence forces platform upgrades.

For gamers already invested in RTX 40- or 50-series cards, the 5800X3D's cache advantage could still outperform newer chips in certain titles. AMD's strategy acknowledges that many users aren't ready to abandon functional hardware, especially when new platform costs remain prohibitive.