Specification
| Basic Information |
| Base Frequency |
3.7GHz |
| Maximum Turbo Frequency |
Up to 4.8GHz |
| Cache |
Total L2 Cache: 6MB
Total L3 Cache: 64MB |
| Cores |
12 |
| Threads |
24 |
| Default TDP |
105W |
| Supported Technologies |
AMD "Zen 3" Core Architecture
AMD StoreMI Technology
AMD Ryzen Master Utility
AMD Ryzen VR-Ready Premium |
| Memory Specifications |
| Maximum Speed |
Up to 3200MHz |
| Type |
DDR4 |
| Graphics Specifications |
| Base Frequency |
3.7GHz |
| Warranty Information |
| Manufacturing Warranty |
03 years warranty (No Warranty for Fan or Cooler) |
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X
Processor is the World’s Best Gaming
Processor which is 12 cores to power through gaming, streaming and more. It will provides the Fastest speed in the Game to get the high-speed gaming performance of the world’s best desktop processor. It is featured with Encode faster, Render faster, Iterate faster and Create more, faster with
AMD Ryzen
Processors. Here used
AMD "Zen 3" Core Architecture which is the fastest cores in the world for PC gamers. The AMD StoreMI Technology is the fast and easy way to expand and accelerate the storage in a desktop PC with an AMD Ryzen
Processor. Here also used
AMD Ryzen Master Utility which is the Simple and Powerful Overclocking Utility for
AMD Ryzen
Processors. This latest
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X
Processor featured with CPU Cores 12, Threads 24, Base Clock 3.7GHz, Max Boost Clock Up to 4.8GHz, Total L2 Cache 6MB, Total L3 Cache 64MB, Unlocked, CMOS, TSMC 7nm FinFET, Package AM4, PCI Express 4.0 Version, Default TDP / TDP 105W, Max Temps 90°C supports Up to 3200MHz DDR4 memory. This processor also comes with
AMD Ryzen Master Utility, which is the Simple and Powerful Overclocking Utility for
AMD Ryzen
Processors. The latest
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X
Processor has 03 years of warranty (No Warranty for Fan or Cooler).
The Fastest in the Game
Get the competitive edge with 12 cores, 24 threads, boost clocks of up to 4.8GHz2 and 70MB of cache. The
AMD Ryzen™ 5900X is the ultimate enthusiast
Processor for gamers, for creators, for everyone.
Powerhouse performance for creators
Obliterate multithreaded tasks like 3D rendering, video rendering, and software compiling by taking advantage of 12 cores, 24 threads, and PCIe® 4.0 support.
Build with Confidence
Configuring and customizing your rig has never been easier.
AMD Ryzen™ 5000 Series desktop
Processors can be dropped into any
AMD 500 Series motherboards with a simple BIOS update.
AMD Ryzen™ Processors
AMD Ryzen™ Master utility gets you real-time access to temperatures, fan speeds, memory timings, core voltage, and CPU frequencies, plus easy switchable profiles. It is the perfect tool for users looking to fine-tune and get more from their
AMD Ryzen™ unlocked
Processor.
THE BEST Processor FOR THE BEST GAMING OS
Ultimate performance. Seamless compatibility. Get an incredible Windows 11 gaming experience with
AMD Ryzen™
Processors.
FEATURES
- The world's best gaming desktop Processor, with 12 cores and 24 processing threads
- Can deliver elite 100-plus FPS performance in the world's most popular games
- Cooler not included, high-performance cooler recommended. Max Temperature- 90°C
- 4.8 GHz Max Boost, unlocked for overclocking, 70 MB of cache, DDR-3200 support
- For the advanced Socket AM4 platform, can support PCIe 4.0 on X570 and B550 motherboards
- Multiplier unlocked
- PCIe 4.0 support
- Gaming performance improved
- Impressive application performance
- Drop-in upgrade for current 500-series AM4 owners
- Superior value versus Intel Core i9 competition
- A new single-core champion
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X Reviews
The
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X is an absolute monster of a CPU, bringing the biggest gen-on-gen jump in single-core performance in years, which helps make the
Processor stronger across the board. The best part? You don't even need a new motherboard.
Thanks to the
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X and the rest of the Ryzen 5000 series, there might be a new champion for the "best
Processor for gaming.”
The war between Intel and
AMD has raged for years over the best single- and multi-threaded performance. It was always believed that you go with
AMD for top-notch multi-threaded performance needed for professional and creative applications. But, if you’re trying to squeeze every ounce of performance for the best PC games, it was assumed that Intel was the best
Processor for the job.
But the
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X may have changed all that. This CPU might just be the best available option. It’s just as capable with single-threaded tasks as it is with multi-threaded ones.
AMD's Ryzen 5000 presentation made this clear, as the company zeroed in on gaming, with creative applications taking a back seat.
Rounded out by PCIe 4.0 support, which Intel still hasn’t implemented, the
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X leads
AMD Processors to finally take the CPU crown. With it, there’s really no reason to buy an Intel
Processor for that gaming PC you’re building.
Performance
Before we dive into performance, we need to get one thing out of the way. Due to the incredibly busy season, we weren't able to retest all the CPUs in time for this review. Instead, we're using the results from the last time we tested all of these
Processors, for the Ryzen 3000XT reviews back in May 2020. We will retest everything in the near future and update the review. We don't expect results to change too much. Oh, and our testing motherboard broke and we're using a new power supply – fun, right?
The
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X is the fastest
Processor we've ever tested on a mainstream platform, and it's not even that close. In all but one of our tests, the Ryzen 9 5900X was significantly ahead of not only its predecessor, the
Ryzen 9 3900X, but ahead of its main competition – the
Intel Core i9-10900K.
We focused our testing around gaming this time around, as that's the core use-case
AMD is now championing – and with good reason.
In the most CPU-demanding game in our testing suite, Assassins Creed Odyssey, the
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X beats out the Intel Core i9-10900K by 8%, pushing it above 80 fps. However, in this test it's pretty much even with the
AMD Ryzen 9 3900X.
The Ryzen 9 5900X has a bigger departure in Total War: Three Kingdoms, however, which is a game that has always favored Intel
Processors. In this game, the
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X averages 116 fps at 1080p with the Ultra quality preset, beating out the Intel Core i9-10900K's 108 fps at the same resolution and quality. That's a 7% difference, there, too.
The only place where Intel holds a lead is in the Time Spy physics test. For this test, we isolate the CPU score, rather than report the overall score. The Ryzen 9 5900X scores 12,885 points to Intel's 13,888 points. That's a 7% lead in Intel's favor, turning the tables in that synthetic gaming workload. However, what's impressive is that it's now even with the Ryzen 9 3950X, the flagship of the previous generation.
Moving on to pure CPU workloads, the Ryzen 9 5900X unsurprisingly wipes the floor with the Core i9-10900K in multi-core workloads – but that was true of the
Ryzen 9 3900X. However, the Ryzen 9 5900X, in the GeekBench 5 multi-core test is now 24% faster than the Intel Core i9-10900K, up from the 11% lead enjoyed by the
Ryzen 9 3900X.
In Cinebench R20, which simulates rendering for creative applications, the multi-core lead expands to a whopping 31%. The smallest lead in pure CPU performance comes in the SISoft Sandra CPU Arithmetic test, where the Ryzen 9 5900X is just 18% faster – but that's still a significant lead.
The biggest story here is the significant jump in single-core performance, facilitated by that ground-up redesign in the Zen 3 architecture. In the Cinebench R20 single-core test, the
AMD Ryzen 9 5900X scores 618 points, up from the 518 scored by the
Ryzen 9 3900X, a 19% gen-on-gen increase. The Intel Core i9-10900K scores 522 points in this test, 18% slower than
AMD.
That story repeats throughout all of our synthetic single-core tests. The Intel Core i9-10900K is 21% slower in Cinebench R15 single-core, 9% slower in GeekBench 4 and 12% slower in GeekBench 5.
AMD has finally claimed the single-core performance crown from Intel. That's heavily reflected in benchmarking software, but what's more impressive is how that's reflected in raw gaming performance. With Zen 3,
AMD set out to create the best
Processor for gaming and in every test we've run, Team Red has absolutely hit that target.
Even more importantly, this marks one of the biggest generational improvements we've ever seen in
Processors. Intel has been adding small increases with each generation, but the Ryzen 9 5900X smashes past the
Ryzen 9 3900X. In fact, while we would normally advise that folks don't upgrade their
Processor after just a single generation – and still largely hold that opinion – there's a genuine case to be made to upgrade to the 5900X from the
3900X, especially if gaming is large portion of what you do with your PC.
This is especially true when you consider the massive generational leaps experienced in the best graphics cards. When you look at how the RTX 3080 behaves at 1080p and 1440p, you need a strong gaming CPU to pair with it – the Ryzen 9 5900X would make an excellent gaming companion.