Testseek.com have collected 187 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 5 3600X 3.8GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 89%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 5 3600X 3.8GHz Socket AM4.
July 2019
(89%)
187 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: AMD Ryzen 3000 is officially here, bringing to consumers more cores, higher clocks, a new platform and most importantly, the first processor lineup to utilize the much anticipated 7nm process node. Unlike the Zen+ refresh which did offer some good reasons...
Holeeeh money, you know. when you put things in perspective money/perf wise then I am pretty impressed with the 3600X. If you are building a high-end DIY PC, and are in need of a proper performing gaming processor at a fair budget, well here is where th...
PRODUCT INFOAMD Ryzen 7 3700X / AMD Ryzen 5 3600X / ASRock X570 TaichiJuly 2019Type CPU / MotherboardPrice $329.99 US / $249.99 US / $299.99 USAMD Ryzen 3000 is officially here, bringing to consumers more cores, higher clocks, a new platform and most impo...
The Ryzen 5 3600X poses a solid one-size-fits-all solution for gamers. It's undoubtedly a convincing upgrade over previous generation chips and the competition's fare, capable of both multithreaded every day workloads, a modicum of content creation, and...
High single- and multi-core performance, Well-priced, Compatible with older chipsets
Runs hotter than the Ryzen 5 2600X
With the relatively simple improvement of a single-core speed boost, AMD has made the Ryzen 5 3600X the most well-realised mid-range Ryzen chip yet. It's always been nice to have such immense multicore power, though anyone who seriously needs it would lik...
While in some situations it's the same old argument - Intel is quicker in games - that argument no longer holds as much weight as it once did thanks to the gains AMD has made. At stock speed, even with a fairly powerful GPU and at 1080p (putting a lot of...
Excellent performance, Affordable, Includes a cooler
Still 6-cores
For the longest time, AMD processors, especially in the mid-range, were the budget choice for gaming. If you didn't have a lot of cash and wanted acceptable performance, you'd pick up an AMD processor, while Intel was the mainstream pick. However, times h...
Better than 1st Gen. 8-core parts, Good overclocking potential, Cool and quiet operation with low power draw, Improved IPC against 1st and 2nd Gen, Solid multi-core performance
Better value CPUs available from AMD (3600 or 2600X)
As an evolutionary step in the AMD Ryzen family, the Ryzen 5 3600X appears to offer one of the biggest leaps from its predecessor, the 2600X, and for roughly the same money as last time around.Of course, there's the issue of the X570 chipset-equipped moth...
Published: 2019-07-29, Author: Luke , review by: kitguru.net
Excellent productivity performance, especially for the price, Significant IPC improvements versus Zen and Zen+, Higher gaming frame rates versus Ryzen 1000 and Ryzen 2000, Precision Boost 2 algorithm works superbly (current AGESA/BIOS quirks aside), Bette
Questionable value over the cheaper Ryzen 5 3600 non-X, Power efficiency compared to the higher-end Zen 2 processors is diminished, Frequency deficit versus Intel Coffee Lake can inhibit competitiveness in certain scenarios
Ryzen 5 3600X builds on the success of its six-core, twelve-thread Zen and Zen+ predecessors by offering productivity performance that punches well above its price point. Gaming performance sees a significant uplift versus previous generation Ryzen chips...
Improved IPC, Solid multi-core performance, Matches dearer Intel Core chips, Good on power
Doesn't overclock fantastically, Ryzen 5 3600 a better value bet
The Ryzen 3000-series bandwagon keeps on rolling this July. Looking to appeal to the mainstream, it's interesting to see how Ryzen 5 chips perform.Ryzen 5 3600X improves upon its immediate predecessor in every meaningful performance metric. It's routi...