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AMD Ryzen 5 3600X (Basistakt: 3.8GHz, max. Takt: 4.4GHz, 6 Kerne, Socket AM4) 100-100000022BOX

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94.79€

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1.Stil:Amd Ryzen 5 3600x


Info zu diesem Artikel

  • AMD Ryzen 5 3600X
  • (Basistakt: 3.8GHz, max. Takt: 4.4GHz, 6 Kerne, Socket AM4)



Produktbeschreibung des Herstellers

dddss

AMD Ryzen 5 3600X Desktop-Prozessor

  • 6 Kerne & 12 Fäden
  • Basistakt: 3,8 GHz, Max. Boost-Takt: bis zu 4,4 GHz, 35 MB Cache, TDP: 95 W.
ddd

  • Systemspeicherspezifikation: 3200 MHz, Systemspeichertyp: DDR4, Speicherkanäle: 2
  • Sockel: AM4, Motherboard-Kompatibilität: AMD 300, 400, 500 Serles-Motherboards auf Chipsatzbasis

Maurice
Bewertet in Deutschland am 3. Januar 2021
Guten Tag,Ich habe vor einigen Monaten mein System zusammengestellt und muss sagen - der Ryzen 5 3600X ist leistungsmäßig top!Preismäßig, kommt man heutzutage bei guten Prozessoren mit wenig Geld leider nicht mehr so weit.Ich selbst war jahrelang ein Fan von Produkten, die nicht allzu teuer, aber ihre Leistung im vollem Umfang entsprachen.Dies ist hier auf alle Fälle auch so!Ich würde jedem, der ein Ryzen bzw. AMD Fan ist hier zu raten.Mein Produkt hat hier den Vorteil, dass ich diesen übertakten könnte - wenn ich möchte.Somit hätte ich nochmal einige Prozente an Leistung mehr!Menschen, die einen soliden guten PC zusammenbauen möchten, sind mit diesem Prozessor auf jeden Fall nicht falsch.Ich hatte bis dato keine Probleme mit diesem und erfüllt seinen Zweck!GrüßeMaurice
Roman B.
Bewertet in Deutschland am 7. Dezember 2020
Verwende die CPU auf einem Asus B450 Board.Endgegen anderer Meinungen im Netz läuft meine CPU mit 4,6 Ghz auf allen 6 Kernen, die im BIOS eingestellt wurden, stabil. (46x100 und Volt auf automatisch) Bei 99% Auslastung bleibt die CPU auf max. 75-80 Grad mit meiner WK.Das ist ein TOP Wert und wurde im 3D Mark bestätigt.Vielleicht hatte ich Glück und AMD hat sich bei meiner CPU geirrt.Für mich ist das X sehrwohl den mehrpreis wert.
Alfredo B.
Bewertet in Spanien am 4. November 2020
Buscaba ensamblar un equipo de gama media-alta sin sobrepasar los 1000€, por lo que cada componente debía costar un máximo de 200€. Era la primera vez que lo intentaría después de dos pc que me duraron quince años cada uno con múltiples averías por virus y troyanos el primero y por rayos y cortes de luz el segundo.Me hubiera gustado comprar una Ryzen 7, pero ya me salía del presupuesto y, aunque esa diferencia de precio parecía corresponderse a una mejora correlativa de 1/3 en las características (excepto en el reloj base, de 3'8 en este y 3'6 GHz en el Ryzen 7), me obligaría a tener que aumentar en 1/3 el coste de todo el equipo para exprimir todas sus posibilidades.Desde que hace más tiempo del que pueda recordar, vi la primera noticia sobre las mejoras que introducìa Intel Core i7 respecto a su predecesor, esperaba que con los años bajase de precio para poder comprarla. No fue así. Sacaron al mercado Intel Core i9 y mantenían el mismo precio. Pasé de ellos y me decanté definitivamente por AMD. No defrauda.En el paquete encuentras un ventilador que no usé. Compré un disipador Noctua de doble torre que hiciese su trabajo cuando el CPU lo necesita. No mino criptomonedas, no hago overcloock para estrujar la gráfica frente a video juegos, pero sí que edito vídeos de vez en cuando. Aún no he renderizado ninguno, cuando lo haga espero no ver pasar la temperatura de 50-75 grados.Estuve regulando el software de de la placa ASUS ROG STRIX B550-F GAMING (WI-FI), llamado AI Suite 3, para que los ventiladores del equipo se accionaran a partir de 20º, porque vi que el Chipset pasaba de 50º y no se ponían en funcionamiento. Yo estaba navengado y viendo videos. Tampoco me gustaba la idea de mantener el procesador Ryzen 5 3600X a una temperatura que ronda los 33-34º. Ahora se mueven todos, incluido el disipador, pero ni los oigo, llevo navengado dos horas y la temperatura del Chipset... ¡Oh sorpresa! Está en 50º, cuando el máximo es 70º antes de que el equipo se apague solo. El CPU se mantiene a 34º. Esto tengo que controlarlo mejor.Bueno, con todo, creo que el procesador AMD Ryzen 5 me dará todo lo que quiero y más. Busco la durabilidad y espero que no me defraude. Hoy he recibido el último de los componenentes necesarios para equilibrar este equipo, esta vez uno externo: el SAI. Uno de Eaton a 500W, que soportará los 300 de consumo total constante de este equipo. Usé una página web que te lo calcula apuntando el hardware usado.
Benedikt Wörz
Bewertet in Deutschland am 3. September 2020
Ich war etwas nervös wegen der Temperatur, die mit einem guten (separat gekauften) Lüfter beinahe dauerhaft bei 50-60°C liegt. Allerdings habe ich nach einigem Verwenden und Testen festgestellt, dass die Temperatur auch unter voller Last kaum jemals über 70°C lag, was meine Bedenken beruhigt.Die Leistung ist für den Preis exzellent. Ich habe noch keine Anwendung oder Aktivität gefunden, bei der dieser Prozessor mich ausbremst oder an seine Grenzen kommt.
Fin
Bewertet in Australien am 27. September 2020
Works great. I got this as a backup CPU for AM4 slot and I hardly ever use over 50% CPU unless I'm 3d modelling or rendering
Soumyajit Deb
Bewertet in Indien am 27. Februar 2020
While the 3600 is the CPU of choice for most, the 3600x is worth buying too if the price differential isn't much. In my case it was a mere 900 rupees during one of th amazon sale days. For that you get:I) A better CPU cooler if you plan to run at default stock speedsII) Better binned cores - I see 5/6 cores running upto 4.4 GHz in my sampleIII) Better memory controller - mine does 3800 easy on micron e-die.IV) This sample maintains 1900 IF speeds without instability.
R. Beckmann
Bewertet in Deutschland am 22. August 2020
Hardware (soweit relevant):- Prozessor: Ryzen 5 3600X ohne Overclocking (zuvor Ryzen 5 1600X)- Board: MSI X370 SLI PLUS- Prozessorlüfter: Arctic Freezer 13 Tower Kühler (gefiel mir von der Geräuschentwicklung schon auf dem 1600X, daher habe ich nicht den AMD Lüfter verwendet/ ASIN B0048F64DU)- RAM: 32GB Crucial Ballistix Sport LT BLS2K16G4D32AESC 3200 MHz mit Overclocking auf 3333Mhz (ASIN: B07M5RKH5Z)- Grafik: MSI Geforce GTX1060 6GB- Gehäuse: Be Quiet Silent Base 800Also, erstmal das neueste BIOS auf's Board gezogen, den 3600X mit dem Artic Freezer 13 eingebaut, den Rest des Rechners wieder montiert/angeschlossen und los ging's.Das Plus an Performance war deutlich spürbar (z.B. beim Boot und beim Start von Anwendungen, aber auch bei Nutzung des Web) und auch messbar (z.B. Cinebench R20 Multicore +1013 Punkte/ Cinebench R15 Multicore +427).Zu Beginn hatte ich auch das Problem, dass der Rechner im Leerlauf kaum unter 50 Grad (Celsius) zu bekommen war. Dann habe ich die aktuellen Chipsatz-Treiber installiert und siehe da, im Leerlauf nur noch 33-40 Grad und beim Stresstest kaum über 70 Grad (lässt sich auch auf "ComputerBase" im Forum nachlesen Post "Ryzen 5 3600X zu hohe Temp" Beitrag #20). Auch der Boost auf 4400 Mhz (angezeigt werden 4398 Mhz) funktioniert wie erwartet.Wer dann noch wegen der Lüftergeräusche Probleme hat, kann die Lüfterkrurve anpassen.Der Ryzen 5 3600X kostet derzeit ca. 200 € und bietet damit eine sehr gute Upgrade Möglichkeit, gerade auch für ältere Boards. Den Ryzen 7 3700X bekommt man aber auch schon für ca. 90 € mehr (muss jeder für sich entscheiden). Das Plus an Leistung beim Wechsel vom 1600X auf den 3600X macht sich deutlich bemerkbar, nicht nur bei Benchmarks, sondern auch im täglichen Betrieb. Zu hohe Hitze lässt sich mit den aktuellen Chipsatz-Treibern beheben. Wem der AMD-Lüfter zu laut ist, sollte noch ein paar Euro in einen Alternativlüfter investieren.Ich bin sehr zufrieden und die dritte Ryzen-Genaration dürfte auch die Letzte sein, die auf meinem Board noch läuft.
Darkoasis
Bewertet in den USA am2. August 2020
This CPU is amazing. It is great at everything. It can game, multitask, stream, productivity, and more. It’s priced good enough that even if you just want it for general computing it’s still great. This thing comes pushed to the limit straight out of the box pretty much. Traditionally I overclock every CPU I buy but with this one AMD have pretty much pushed them to the max for us. Which is great because it’s plug n play! Mine with PBO and Thermal Limits set to max stays around 4.250ghz on all cores gaming under full load with 1 of the 6 cores boosting to 4.35-4.15ghz. So in a game 5 cores will be at 4.250 ghz and one core will always be around 4.35-4.15ghz with that 1 core alternating so they take turns. This gives great ipc and single threaded performance as well as multithreaded. This gives high FPS in games due to the strong single core performance than a 4.3ghz all core overclock gets. You can basically set PBO to max and TBU to max and your motherboard and system will boost it as high as it can. It’s amazing it’s literally drop it in and your good to go this time around. No overclocking needed. I have this CPU in the Asus Prime X570-Pro motherboard if anyone was curious. It was 260 dollar board so it’s pretty nice imo. So your numbers may be different than mine. For cooling I’m using a simple Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo in Push/Pull with twin fans. Keeps my CPU in the mid 30sC idle, in the 50sC in gaming rather it’s an hour or all day long. Under Prime 95 stress test it topped out at 76C then dropped back to 74C and stayed there. For a 35 dollar cooler pretty insane. I have great case air flow so if you do not do not expect these results. The best way to get more performance from your Ryzen CPU since it’s basically pushed to the max out of the box is via memory. You can look it up if you wish. Memory speed significantly effects your cpus performance at least in gaming. It was shown going from 2666mhz to 3600mhz memory speed in games was giving huge FPS increases. In almost all games 10-20 FPS increase with some games increasing as much as 30-40fps. So if you buy a Ryzen CPU for the love of god buy 3600mhz memory with it. I have 32GB of G.Skill Ripjaws in mine all running at 3600mhz and that’s using all 4 dimm slots 4x8GB sticks in duel channel mode. Fast memory paired with this CPU in a good motherboard means you don’t have to overclock or touch anything this time around and you get amazing performance in all regards. I have my 3600x and 3600mhz memory paired with a RTX 2070 Super that is overclocked really well and I am playing any games I want at 1440P maxed out getting 100+ FPS in pretty much everything. If you want a nice CPU for gaming, streaming, content creation, or anything else well you’re looking at one. At this point in time the Ryzen 3600XT is out now which is basically this exact CPU except it runs around 4.6ghz in the boosting alternative core and probably around 4.4 on the other 5 core. So you gain roughly about 200mhz over this 3600x by going with the XT. Rather that’s worth it well that’s up to you. At most the difference in FPS between the two might be 5 FPS at max. So just get whichever is the best deal. Even the Ryzen 3600 non X or non XT does very very similar in performance to the X and XT and is 150 dollars right now. Everything I said pretty much applies to all 3 CPUs they are just an amazing gaming chip.
Cmiri
Bewertet in Großbritannien am 27. Juli 2019
Update 20th January 2020:I upgraded to a 3900x. I've been using it for a couple of weeks and l'm loving it. A few things to note for those of you Ryzen 3rd Gen. users and prospective buyers:1. Voltage offset is your friend. In my case and with my specific MOBO (Asus C6H - x370) the different Ryzen CPUs I had (3600x, 3700x and now 3900x) behaved in the same way:- High voltage at idle up to 1.5V- (Thus) 'high' idle temps: around 37-45ºC- Around 1.2-1.3V at load, temps around 60ºC (ranging from 55 to 65ºC on a Corsair H150i Pro, quiet pump and all fans spinning around 800 RPMs).I don't care what "Robert" from AMD says and I surely don't trust him; I trust the numbers I get on my PC. So, if you want a quieter, more efficient, longer lasting (probably) Ryzen 3rd. Gen. CPU, I advise to go the 'voltage offset' route. Personally, I have my chip set to -1.0V so the 3900x never has more than 1.4V fed to it (I did the same on the 3700x; l actually had this CPU with a 1.250V undervolt and it did just as good as stock. I haven't tried to go so 'low' on voltage on the 3900x yet. I bet it'll work just fine, but until I try it I won't know for certain). I have run benchmarks (games, Cinebench) and I get slightly better results with the offset voltage. YMMV.2. If you want a totally silent PC experience (and have the appropriate components you'll need for it), I suggest you set a fan curve where fans won't spin up until the CPU reaches 62-63ºC AND you set the fans to have around 3 to 5 seconds response delay (you can actually set normal fan curves as long as you have a 5 seconds response delay. Just observe the CPU behavior and you'll understand the *rational for this).*This is all about trying to get around the 'low usage' and 'high voltage' Ryzen 3rd. Gen. behavior. Open an app and it'll boost up to its max., having the voltage fed to it to its max., too. This causes the temps to go much higher than at idle but just for literally a couple/few seconds. I've noticed the CPU won't care whether my fans are spinning at 2000 or 700 RPMs: it will still reach such temps. and settle there.Thus, the way to go is what l mentioned above. That way, your fans won't bother what the CPU is doing and will only spin up when the CPU truly needs it (beyond 62-63ºC). Funny enough that will hardly ever happen (almost never in my system) as, unless you don't have the appropriate airflow, your 3rd Gen. Ryzen CPU will hardly go beyond the aforementioned temps. Sure enough, again, your temps will vary according to the airflow in your case and ambient temps.3. I don't think l have noticed a significant improvement when going from the 3600x to the 3700x and then to the 3900x (as expected). All these CPUs are pretty snappy and a joy to use (once it's all properly configured). Unless you have a workload that requires more than 6 cores OR you are an enthusiast like me who gets thrilled just by thinking you have a 12 cores and 24 threads CPU, you're probably better off with the 3600 (even the non x).If you aren't planning to change the CPU until 3 years or beyond (and you like gaming) l'd probably buy the 3700x. Games like Battlefield V do use those 8 cores and even 12! I've seen "BV" using 54% of the 3900x (that's using those 12 cores fully and some of one thread) and I see up to 64% usage when 'loading' the game "COD MW 2019" or the next level. That is insane.If you aren't a gamer, an enthusiast and/or you won't utilize applications that take advantage of extra cores, then, really, go and get a 3400G. It's an excellent CPU (on daily, 'normal' usage you wouldn't notice a big difference between that one and the 3900x. Of course there is a difference, but not the one you may have in mind; not a 4 VS 12 cores difference.I got a 3400G for my wife and she can't be happier. Mind you, l would've gotten her the best available in the market had l thought a difference was to be found (for her PC usage). The 3400G will save you money (cheaper, no GPU needed, less powerful PSU required... even the electricity bill will be cheaper... ;-)Girls and boys, if you have questions, down in the comments. I hope this helps!Update 1st October 2019:I switched to a 3700x. The only difference l notice between the 3600x and the 3700x is when looking at MSI Afterburner OSD overlay while playing Battlefield V. Now, CPU usage is a lot less than before. If you're just a gamer you should be more than fine with the 3600x, l surely was. It just that seeing that high CPU usage while playing BV was bugging me (YMMV, as ever).The 3700x at stock (PBO off) is hitting advertised clocks in most cores. More importantly, idle voltage and temps are now settled after upgrading to BIOS 7501 (on an Asus C6H x370). I'm using Ryzen Balanced Windows Power Plan.So yeah, so far so good. Boy this's been a journey!I guess l'll now wait for an offer on the 3900x, not because l need it (not by any means!) but because l can and l am a PC enthusiast. Having 6 cores is good, 8 is great and 12 is awesome. 16 cores, l hear you say? Yeah, bring them on baby!Update 18th September 2019:- Upgraded to 5 STARS. At this price (I paid GBP 220, bought from Amazon), this CPU is amazing.- Added picture showing 2 cores reaching 4468MHz (HWinfo).- Waiting for BIOS update of 30th September.I continue being very happy with this CPU. It's snappy and fast. I have observed games like "Battlefield V" using it up to 90%. The game runs as smooth as you would want it (paired to a MSI RTX 2080 Gaming X Trio) and it's a joy to play.Now, my plan is to upgrade to a better Ryzen CPU next year and hopefully keep it for a few years (I'd buy an 8 cores minimum). If you buy a CPU having in mind to keep it for 3+ years, and you like playing games that utilize 8 or more cores if available (like "BV" does) then I would suggest you going for a 3700x instead. It'll be a better buy in that case scenario.Update (a week after purchase):I got into terms with this CPU and decided to keep it.After a week of daily usage l can tell this processor is faster and snappier than the one it’s replacing, a 1700x@3.9Ghz.The only problem I found is the idle temperatures are ‘somehow’ hotter than the 1700x (even when OC). Basically, when idling, the 3600x temperature jumps from around 35°C all the way to 60-63°C. It is a strange, ‘restless’ behavior (see my system’s specs at the bottom).I have come into terms with this by readjusting the fans’ curve. In any case, the fans every now and then rev up to speeds they never reached before (past 2000Rpms in the case of the CPU fans when the latter occasionally reaches 73°C for a few seconds while loading a game). This happens rarely, but I’ve seeing it.In most cases, while gaming or stress testing, the CPU tends to sit at 60-63°C with an ambient temperature of around 20°C. For example, playing Battlefield V (3840x1200@120Hz), as you can see in the (lousy) uploaded pictures. I’d happily say this CPU is pretty cool under load.Another ‘weird’ thing I observed is the voltage. At idle, 1.4V; under load 1.3V. I think this is why the CPU is hot and jumpy when idling VS cooler and more stable under load. I researched online and found that the higher idle voltage is meant to ‘assist’ the 1-2 cores higher clock speed, whereas the lower voltage under load is because of the slower 6 clocks core speed.Speaking of clock speed, my processor has no problem reaching the advertised 4.4Ghz and even 4.450Ghz occasionally. While playing games it sits at 4.275-4.3Ghz, often speeding up to 4.375Ghz. I used “GPU Tweak II” to see the CPU’s behavior ‘while playing games’ and “HWmonitor” to monitor it in general.One thing to notice is the CPU cooler l’m using: an AIO 360mm Corsair H150i PRO with 3x Be Quiet Silent Wings 3 fans. Keep in mind your clock speed and you temps may vary when pairing the 3600x with a different, less efficient cooler.I’ll try to take and add new, more informative pictures when l have the time.All in all, if you’re coming from a 1700x/2700x or slower, I’d recommend the upgrade if you’re looking for a faster ‘Single Core (SC)’ speed and a snappier feeling when using the PC (e.g. opening programs, loading websites, etc.). (Bear in mind, around half a year ago I tried the 2700x on my rig but l sent it back due to not noticing any improvement compared to my 1700x.)I keep the 4 stars rating due to the 'weird idle behavior'. Otherwise this CPU would completely deserve 5 stars. Price to performance it is a 5 stars CPU.My rig:- 3600x- C6H (x370)- RTX 2080 Strix- Corsair H150i PRO (with 3x Be Quiet Silent Wings 3)- NVME Samsung 960 PRO- 3200Mhz – 16GB RAM – Corsair Dominator Platinum- EVGA T2 - 850w- Be Quiet Dark Base 900 Pro……………………………….(*As a side note and in order to help prospective buyers decide between this CPU and the 3700x.)If your usage is like mine (Word, 20+ tabs/two windows internet browsing, gaming AAA games, listening to music and watching movies) then this CPU will surely serve you very well. I would certainly also explore Intel options (specifically the 9700K if on offer).I’ve had an 8 cores CPU (the aforementioned 1700x) and trust me, if you want a fast, snappy feeling on your PC, you want high SC performance. Leave all those 8 cores for ‘video editors’ and other users of applications that utilize a high core/thread count.‘Future proofing,’ I hear you say? I laugh at that concept. My beloved 1700x bought in the best region of the world (Cambridge, Massachusetts) in May 2017 (yeah, I was a Zen early adopter) is already outdated by a 6 cores CPU, 2 years later. There is no ‘future proofing’ in technology. Now, if you can’t afford an upgrade every 2 years or you just don’t bother, then surely, aim at the best you can buy today. I would then pay the extra 80 GBP and get the 3700x because those extra 2 cores may come handy in the coming 4-5 years. If your PC usage is like mine and you’re like me in that you’re already thinking of the new Ryzen CPU (Zen 5?) then get this one and save those 80 GBP for the next Ryzen generation.‘Some games use 8 cores,’ you say. Well, check games benchmarks and tell me what the difference is: 5fps? 8fps in the best case scenario? Will you notice that? I surely won’t.……………………………….(Initial review.)I have mixed feelings about the 3600x.On one hand it 'feels' snappier and faster than my old and trusty 1700x (even when OC to 3.9Ghz), on the other hand the 3600x runs hotter when idling.My PC was silent until upgrading to the 3600x. I can now hear the 3x Be Quiet Silent Wings 3 fans revving up (installed on a 360mm AIO Corsair 150i PRO) at idle. Ambient temperature: 19°C.The CPU reaches the advertised speed and l have seen it surpassing it, too (see pictures attached). When all cores are in use it seats at 4.09 while aleatory changing the speed of 1 core to 4.124Mhz (when benchmarking Cinebench r15 MC).So far it gets 4 stars because it runs significantly hotter than the 1700x (3.9Ghz OC) at idle. When gaming (BV) it sits at around 63-65°C (see attached pictures) (Front door of my case opened, 3x 140mm Be Quiet Silent Wings 3 located at the case front running at full speed).Conclusion, after a few hours of testing (To be updated):- It feels snappier/faster than a 1700x (OC to 3.9Ghz) when opening programs and ‘normal usage’. This time it’s not only about ‘numbers’ (benchmarks) but you can ‘feel’ the difference.- It runs hotter than a 1700x (even when OC to 3.9Ghz).- Metro Exodus Benchmark: l get the very same results with the 3600x and the 1700x on this benchmark. I guess l’m GPU limited/bottlenecked (but just to say).One star off because of the temps at idle. l'll conduct further testing and come back to update this review in a week.
Hannes
Bewertet in Deutschland am 2. September 2019
Preis-Leistung ist bei AMD unschlagbar. Ob man sich für 50 € Aufpreis das X am Ende leisten möchte soll jeder selbst entscheiden.Der Prozessor bietet stabile Performance bei günstigem Preis. Leider erreicht der Prozessor nicht angegebenen Boost Takt. Hier scheint es noch ein generelles Problem zu geben und Verweise an der Stelle auf ein Video bei YouTube von derBauer. Wird wohl noch etwas dauern bis die neue Technik durch Updates reibungslos das abliefert was versprochen wurde.Ich gebe dennoch 4 Sterne da ich trotz des nicht erreichten Boosttaktes voll zufrieden bin.Takt:Wie einleitend beschrieben erreicht die CPU nicht den angegeben Boosttakt. Im Cinebench R15 werden maximal 4,295 Gigaherz erreicht. Der Prozessor wird auf einem Asus ROG Strix X570-F Mainboard betrieben.Temperatur:Mit meinem beQuiet Dark Rock 4 wird die CPU beim Spielen knapp im schlisten Fall 70 Grad warm. Im Idle sind es ca. 35-40. Bei Prime95 hatte ich auch schon einmal an die 88 Grad. Was ich hierzu im Internet lesen konnte scheinen die Temperaturen im normalen Bereich zu sein.
RH
Bewertet in Deutschland am 15. November 2019
Die Ryzen 5er Reihe ist seit Release der ersten Generation mein absoluter Preis-Leistungssieger und auch hier wurde ich nicht enttäuscht. 4,4 GHz Boost bei leicht angepassten PrecisionBoostOverdrive Werten und ein fast nicht vorhandener Stromverbrauch im Idle lassen die aktuellen Intel CPUs alt aussehen.Mir ist bewusst, dass hierbei nicht der direkte Vergleich zum Intel 9900k, was Gaming betrifft zu machen ist.AberA: liegen hier 150-200 Euro Differenz dazwischenundB: kann dieser Prozessor immer noch auf den Boards der ersten Generation betrieben werden, sodass hier im besten Fall fast 400 Euro Differenz zwischen beiden System liegen.Die Mehrleistung im Gaming ist gerade ab WQHD bzw. 4K zu vernachlässigen, wenn man mich fragt, da hier zu 99% die GPU der Flaschenhals ist.Ich bin also weiterhin begeistert von der gelieferten Leistung seitens AMD und werde wohl noch eine Weile dem "roten" AMD-Lager treu bleiben.
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