Testseek.com have collected 261 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 3 1200 3.1GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 82%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 3 1200 3.1GHz Socket AM4.
August 2017
(82%)
261 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
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0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
820100261
The editors liked
Four physical cores for much less than competing Intel Core i5 chips
Gaming performance on par with similar Intel chips
Good Performance
All Quad-Cores
Low Power Consumption
Competitive Pricing
Unlocked multiplier
Aggressive pricing
Beats competing Core i3 parts in multi-threaded apps
Single-thread performance improved over previous generation
Heatsink included
Platform updated to include latest features (PCIe 3.0
USB 3.1
NVMe)
50% More Cores Than Core i3
Outstanding Performance
Fully Unlocked
Can Easily Be OC'd to 4Ghz+
Perfect For Multi-Tasking
Future-Proof Platform
Great Price/Performance Value
Runs Very Cool
The R3 1200 overclocks well (even for a Ryzen CPU) and doing so put it nearly on par with the i57500. Overclocking is enabled by low temps
Low power
The editors didn't like
Lacks thread-doubling SMT tech of pricier Ryzen chips
Better-performing
Higher-clocked Ryzen 3 1300X costs just $20 more
Typically Trails Core i3 In Single-Thread Workloads
Moderate Overclocking
Lacks integrated graphics
Significantly slower than the Ryzen 3 1300X
Low single-thread performance takes away the Ryzen "wow factor"
Gaming performance doesn't match up to competing Intel parts
Setup complicated (memory
HPET
CCX
SMT
And power pro
Memory Compatibility Limited
The R3 1300X is less attractive than the 1200 considering it costs $20 more and only overclocks another 100MHz
Published: 2019-01-14, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
Battling CPUs at $60 is going to be a tough call. Do you throw the best hardware around the chip that money can buy to compare the absolute limits of the hardware under ideal conditions, or do you keep it more reasonable for the price bracket it is intend...
Published: 2018-11-21, Author: John , review by: servethehome.com
For many use cases, the Intel Xeon E-2136 is all that you will need. It provides high clock speeds and lots of performance that puts the entire Intel Xeon E3-1200 V6 line to shame. If you are a dedicated web host, using the Intel Xeon E-2136 is going to b...
Abstract: Its hard to believe considering we just finished up an Intel launch, but it is already time to check out Intel’s next launch. Kaby Lake was launched at the beginning of this year and the Mainstream lineup of CPUs is getting refreshed with Coffee Lake and Z370. This is the 8th generation of Intel’s Core processors going back to the original launch back in 2006...
Published: 2018-01-25, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: Earlier this week I posted some benchmarks looking at Intel Pentium vs. AMD Ryzen 3 performance for Linux gaming. Those tests on the Pentium and Ryzen systems were done with both NVIDIA and AMD Radeon graphics for seeing how the gaming performance compar...
Abstract: Its hard to believe considering we just finished up an Intel launch, but it is already time to check out Intel’s next launch. Kaby Lake was launched at the beginning of this year and the Mainstream lineup of CPUs is getting refreshed with Coffee Lake and Z370. This is the 8th generation of Intel’s Core processors going back to the original launch back in 2006...
Abstract: With AMD's Ryzen 3, the Zen architecture has trickled down into the entry-level market. Lacking SMT, the affordable CPUs did fairly well in our tests regardless, and are most certainly a viable alternative and worthy of a recommendation for entry-level sy...
So I think most people will admit that AMD has had a lot of wins this year with all of the Ryzen launches. As I found out in our 1700v7700K coverage the 7700K was still a great performing CPU, especially when looking at gaming performance. But with ju...
Abstract: AMD Ryzen 3 vs Ryzen 5 vs Ryzen 7So far we have taken a close look at most of AMD's Ryzen line-up and, while there have been variances from model to model, overall both the Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 7 series have indeed lived up to expectations. Their combination...
The AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X and Threadripper 1920X are very impressive processors that did extremely well in content creation benchmarks that take advantage of having a 16-core, 32-thread processor in the system. The good news is a good number of app...
Published: 2017-08-04, Author: HP , review by: relaxedtech.com
50% More Cores Than Core i3, Outstanding Performance, Fully Unlocked, Can Easily Be OC'd to 4Ghz+, Perfect For Multi-Tasking, Future-Proof Platform, Great Price/Performance Value, Runs Very Cool
Memory Compatibility Limited
AMD continues to dominate the CPU market with their Ryzen processors and the Ryzen 3 lineup is no exception. Intel's Core i3 lineup is all 2C/4T and have a locked multiplier while the Ryzen 3 lineup comes with four cores and a fully unlocked multiplier. M...