AMD Announces Ryzen 7000 Specs and Pricing

Source: AMD (YouTube) AMD Announces Ryzen 7000 Specs and Pricing

The Official AMD Zen 4 Desktop Processor Lineup

We spent part of Monday evening watching AMD’s “together we advance_PCs” event on the company’s YouTube channel, along with the rest of the tech press, and can provide slightly different screenshots and perhaps a different font or table design for the news you’ve probably read about 47 times already.

We have to start with the most important info: pricing and availability! Let’s face it, AMD fans already knew just about everything else about the new Ryzen CPUs. The official word is screen-capped and printed in table form below.

AMD Ryzen 7000 Specs Pricing Availability Screen
AMD Ryzen 7000 Series Desktop Processors
Model Cores / Threads Base / Boost (up to) Total Cache TDP Price Launch Date
Ryzen 9 7950X 16 / 32 4.5 Ghz / 5.7 GHz 80MB 170W $699 9/27/22
Ryzen 9 7900X 12 / 24 4.7 Ghz / 5.6 GHz 76MB 170W $549 9/27/22
Ryzen 5 7700X 8 / 16 4.5 GHz / 5.4 GHz 40MB 105W $399 9/27/22
Ryzen 5 7600X 6 / 12 4.7 GHz / 5.3 GHz 38MB 105W $299 9/27/22

The new flagship Ryzen 9 7950X processor will launch at $699 USD, and while this is considerably higher than the Ryzen 9 5950X has been selling for of late ($546 as I write this), it is $100 below the $799 launch price of that previous flagship. It remains a 16-core, 32-thread part, and the rest of the lineup offers familiar core/thread counts as well.

Both clock speeds and power consumption are up, as we knew they would be, with the highest turbo clock belonging to the R9 7950X at 5.7 GHz, and the four announced SKUs ranging from 105W to 170W TDPs. One assumes that 65W non-X parts with lower clocks will follow at some point.

As to performance, we await independent testing but AMD seems confident in their IPC increases, which are reportedly up around 13% compared to Zen 3, with a total per-core uplift (including the higher clocks and move to faster DDR5 memory) bringing this up to a “29% total single thread performance gain”.

Efficiency is a key driver of performance, with AMD claiming “~62% lower power (same performance)” vs. the Ryzen 9 5950X, and “49% more performance (same power)”, on average compared to the Ryzen 5000 series. Oh, and AMD was able to boast about their AVX 512 instruction set with the new architecture – something Intel officially removed from the 12th Gen Core processors after launch.

AMD is being very aggressive with the Ryzen 7000 lineup, putting pressure on Intel’s upcoming 13th Gen launch. It should be an interesting autumn.

Video News

About The Author

Sebastian Peak

Editor-in-Chief at PC Perspective. Writer of computer stuff, vintage PC nerd, and full-time dad. Still in search of the perfect smartphone. In his nonexistent spare time Sebastian's hobbies include hi-fi audio, guitars, and road bikes. Currently investigating time travel.

3 Comments

  1. WayneJetSki

    I am VERY tempted to build a new PC…. When I can get my hands on a next generation AMD video card. Hopefully those AMD video cards will have much better real time ray tracing performance.

    I have a Ryzen 5 1600 with an old GTX 770 in it.

    Reply
    • BigTed

      You could always cheap out and pop a 5600x in your mobo if it supports it.

      Reply
  2. BigTed

    Looks like you’ll have a busy autumn / winter at the bench, what with 13th gen Intel, 5000 series Ryzen, Lovelace and maybe RDNA 3. Oh, and maybe a bit of Arc. You shouldn’t need to have the heating much though.

    Reply

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Latest Podcasts

Archive & Timeline

Previous 12 months
Explore: All The Years!