Testseek.com have collected 213 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 92%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8GHz Socket AM4.
July 2019
(92%)
213 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
920100213
The editors liked
Great Performance
Relatively Low Power
Many Overclocking Options
Improved IPC and Latency
Competitive Pricing
12-Cores
24-Threads in a desktop platform
Beats Core i9-9900K conclusively in multi-threaded applications
Gaming performance significantly improved
10% over previous generation
Outstanding multi-threaded power efficiency
Unlocked multiplier
Suppor
Consistently good system performance
Excellent gaming performance
12 cores and 24 threads
Energy efficient
Future-proofed
PCI Express 4.0
Stylish stock cooler
Still using Socket AM4
Soldered heat spreader
Support for PCIe 4.0
Bundled cooler
Compatible with X470 motherboards
Indium solder
12-cores
24-threads on the mainstream platform
Easily beats the Core i9-9900K in multi-core workloads
Better single-core and gaming performance than previous generation
AMD Gamecache
CPU cooler included
Pretty easy to overclock
X570 motherboards a
50 percent more cores
Fast and efficient architecture
PCIe Gen4 and 7nm
The editors didn't like
Higher Idle Power
Wide X570 Pricing
Single-Thread Still Just Behind Intel
Still not as fast as Intel in gaming
No integrated graphics
Unreliable TDP specification
Relatively expensive X570 platform
Comparatively expensive at launch by AMD standards
PCIe 4.0 only with the X570 chipset
Stock cooler gets loud under load
High core temperatures with the stock cooler
Hardly any overclo
Requires expensive X570 motherboards for PCIe 4.0 support
The results of our clock-speed analysis and performance tests bode well for AMD, beginning with the CPU tests. In applications that don't scale across cores, such as a single process of web-rendering as tested in Google Octane, we see a significant 6 per...
50 percent more cores, Fast and efficient architecture, PCIe Gen4 and 7nm
Most apps don't need 12 cores, Technically a bit slower in games, Weak overclocking potential
The Ryzen 9 3900X is easily the most compelling enthusiast CPU from AMD in the past 15 years. It can do everything you need and then some, even if it's marginally slower in some games...
Abstract: The desktop CPU war between Intel and AMD is the most exciting it's been in years. AMD has been rapidly catching up thanks to their new Zen core microarchitecture that was first introduced in 2017 in Ryzen 1000 series processors. AMD has since rolled out...
Abstract: Geekbench 5 was officially released by Primate Labs today and Legit Reviews has been taking a look at this benchmark in the lab. The release of Geekbench 5 brings new machine learning, augmented reality, and computational photography workloads to the CPU...
Abstract: AMD's new 3rd Gen Ryzen processors that are built on the 7nm manufacturing process helped close the performance gap with Intel when they launched last month. Our testing showed that AMD led many of the heavily threaded tests since they had more cores, bu...
Published: 2019-08-19, Author: Steven , review by: techspot.com
Abstract: Having tested 3rd-gen Ryzen processors with the GeForce RTX 2080 Ti extensively, our idea behind this new feature is to add mainstream and budget GPUs to the mix in a benchmark run that reflects more settings and resolutions gamers will likely use when tu...
Published: 2019-08-13, Author: Dave , review by: hothardware.com
Abstract: AMD's Ryzen 3000 series processors have made a positive impact on the PC enthusiast market, the likes of which we haven't seen in years. From a performance-per-dollar standpoint, AMD's disruptive Zen 2 architecture offers a strong value proposition for ne...
Published: 2019-08-12, Author: Sebastian , review by: notebookcheck.net
consistently good system performance, excellent gaming performance, 12 cores and 24 threads, energy efficient, future-proofed, PCI Express 4.0, stylish stock cooler, still using Socket AM4, soldered heat spreader
unreliable TDP specification, relatively expensive X570 platform, comparatively expensive at launch by AMD standards, PCIe 4.0 only with the X570 chipset, stock cooler gets loud under load, high core temperatures with the stock cooler, hardly any overclo
The AMD Ryzen 9 3900X desktop CPU review. Test device courtesy of AMD Germany.AMD has put a lot of pressure on Intel with the release of the Ryzen 3000 family. The company has got a lot right too, while the reinvigorated competition in the desktop CPU mar...
Published: 2019-08-08, Author: Steven , review by: techspot.com
Abstract: When we reviewed Ryzen's latest iteration we briefly checked out how DDR4-3200 CL14 compared to the DDR4-3600 CL16 memory that AMD supplied to us, as they claimed that was an optimal configuration. Turns out there was very little difference between the tw...
Looking at our benchmark results, we can confirm definite performance improvements with the new AMD chipset drivers across the board. Especially low-threaded applications benefit in a significant way, some posting several percent improvements, which is b...