Testseek.com have collected 416 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 5 2400G 3.6GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 84%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 5 2400G 3.6GHz Socket AM4.
February 2018
(84%)
416 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(98%)
17 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
840100416
The editors liked
Price
Higher frequencies
Solid 720p gaming performance
Passable 1080p gaming in some titles with low settings
Unlocked multipliers
Great Integrated Graphics
Low Power
Unlocked CPU and GPU
Works In Existing AM4 Motherboards
Great entry-level graphics value as discrete GPU prices remain turbulent
Plays anything at 720p 30 FPS (lowest settings)
Uses existing AM4 motherboards
Decent entry-level CPU performance
4 cores / 8 threads
Feature-rich iGPU supports latest video for
Exceptional CPU and GPU performance at their respective price points. GPU performance crushes Intel integrated graphics
Around discrete GeForce GT 1030 levels. Included Wraith cooler. Great motherboard support
Especially on a budget
The editors didn't like
Eight lanes for PCIe slots
Need to ensure motherboard BIOS compatibility
Nonmetallic TIM
Requires a better heatsink for overclocking
Slower In Some Circunstances
Requires Expensive Memory To Shine
Only 4 MB cache
High price if you focus on CPU performance
1080p gaming tough ask
Unless playing older titles
Crippled PCIe root complex
Discrete GPUs limited to x8 bandwidth
No CF/SLI even on X370
BIOS update needed for support on existing motherb
Current memory pricing messes with the total value offered by AMD's APU platform and memory speed matters in this case. Graphics drivers are a little immature (this could turn out to be a pro in a few weeks' time)
Published: 2018-02-13, Author: Gordon , review by: pcworld.co.nz
We've tested plenty of CPUs with integrated graphics, but with all of them, we've had to issue more disclaimers than a pharmaceutical ad. AMD's new Ryzen APUs are simply the first processors with graphics to get everything right.With the new Ryzen APUs an...
For those who occasionally play a game, the integrated graphics card may be sufficient, as long as the game in question does not boast too much graphic splendour. In order to find out when the iGPUs fail and when a separate card is needed, we did test som...
Which processor now offers the most bang of your buck varies per price segment. If you have a very small budget, in our opinion it is best to find an Intel Pentium G4560, which, given its higher availability, is less of a challenge than it was a few month...
Which processor now offers the most bang of your buck varies per price segment. If you have a very small budget, in our opinion it is best to find an Intel Pentium G4560, which, given its higher availability, is less of a challenge than it was a few month...
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Published: 2018-02-26, Author: Andrew , review by: techteamgb.co.uk
Abstract: AMD's new Ryzen 3 2200G and Ryzen 5 2400G chips are impressive. They feature decently powerful CPUs, and a Vega graphics core allowing for up to 1080p medium settings gaming, and more! Want one? 2400G: 2200G: Systems: www.fiercepc.co.uk/catalogsearch/resu...
Published: 2018-02-25, Author: Richard , review by: eurogamer.net
While the Ryzen 3 2200G doesn't have the CPU horsepower to best Intel's more expensive Core i3 8100 in gaming with a discrete GPU, it does have an integrated graphics solution that can actually play modern triple-A titles - and in this area, Intel simply...
Low platform cost, Easy to overclock, Sense MI technologies, Low Power use, Excellent Value, Competitive CPU Performance, Compelling integrated Vegas GPU, Genuine upgrade path (AM4 socket compatibility), Neutral, - Can get a little warm, - Only 8x PCIe l
Early uptake/teething issues
One of the biggest upsets of the initial Ryzen 3 CPUs was the lack of integrated GPU. AMD have now come back, and potentially destroyed the need for a discrete graphics card for a large demographic due to the console-level power packed into the R3 2200G a...
Very solid value, Best-in-class IGP, Intel-like energy efficiency, Increasing motherboard choice
Stability concerns still linger, Single-thread performance is lacking
AMD today expands its desktop Ryzen ecosystem with the introduction of the Ryzen 5 2400G and Ryzen 3 2200G. These two chips offer broadly similar CPU performance as select Ryzen chips from last year but augment the value offering by including integrated g...
Affordable, Decent gaming performance, Onboard graphics are convenient for slim builds
Modest processor performance, Can handle only the least demanding games
In most cases, you shouldn't bother with either the Ryzen 5 2400G or the Ryzen 3 2200G — just buy the Ryzen 5 1600 or Intel Core i3-8100 and pair them with a discrete graphics card. The Ryzen APUs are the option of last resort for budget gaming and, shoul...
Published: 2018-02-12, Author: Matthew , review by: Bit-Tech.net
These new AMD APUs are long overdue. Ryzen successfully reasserted AMD as a strong competitor in the mainstream CPU market, giving customers more cores (or threads at the very least) for less money and forcing Intel to do the same in turn, but every deskt...