Testseek.com have collected 422 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X 3.6GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 7 1800X 3.6GHz Socket AM4.
March 2017
(85%)
422 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
As we noted in the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X CPU Review, gaming is a mixed bag for AMD. Some titles respond well to the new architecture, while most others still require optimization of some sort. Where those optimizations will focus remains a question mark...
Published: 2017-03-13, Author: Christopher , review by: alphr.com
With Ryzen, AMD is firmly back in the processor market, and I'm beyond excited to see how Ryzen 5 and 3 will compete with Intel's Core i5 and i3 CPUs. Looking at the Ryzen 7 1800X, it's one hell of a product. Granted, it might be outside of most consumers...
Value for money, Performance, Factory-unlocked processor
No XFR or Precision Boost when overclocking
With Ryzen, AMD is firmly back in the processor market, and I'm beyond excited to see how Ryzen 5 and 3 will compete with Intel's Core i5 and i3 CPUs. Looking at the Ryzen 7 1800X, it's one hell of a product. Granted, it might be outside of most consumers...
Right now, the Ryzen 7 1800X is proof that AMD is back on form. Although it hasn't knocked Intel off the top spot for outright performance – and certainly not for single-core applications - it has set new standards for value and efficiency. It will surely...
Published: 2017-03-04, Author: Luke , review by: kitguru.net
Superb multithreaded performance at stock clocks, Boost frequencies help to enhance singlethreaded performance, $499 (~£490) selling price (!), Soldered heatspreader allows for good cooling, Unlocked CPU multiplier, Overall cost can be low thanks to the A
Gaming performance is not well suited for ultra high refresh rates, Some memory speed limitations – difficult pushing past 3.2GHz, Dualchannel memory and sixteen PCIe lanes for GPUs may be limitations to some prosumers
AMD's Zen architecture is alive and it starts life in the form of Ryzen 7 by serving a heavyweight blow to Intel's prosumer HEDT platform. AMD‘s 8C16T Ryzen 7 1800X offers similar computational performance to Intel's 8C16T HEDT chip but at half the price...
Massive multi-core performance, Aggressive pricing, Smart calls on architecture, Energy efficient design, Gives users honest choice, Significant ecosystem support
Limited overclocking potential, Single-thread not as good as Intel, Gaming optimisations still needed
Before today, AMD had a difficult time convincing the enthusiast that it was worth going down its CPU route for their next build. Intel held sway through a combination of superior performance emanating from superior architectures.Today, however, the s...
Overall, then, the day has finally arrived that we thought would never come - a competitive CPU from AMD at the high end. There are some teething problems to get over, and don't expect as polished an experience as you would from an Intel Z270 system right...
Published: 2017-03-02, Author: Dave , review by: pcgamesn.com
Abstract: AMD's Ryzen 7 1800X has finally been released, chucking eight cores and sixteen threads of processing power down the throats of a ravenous hardware crowd. The early reviews are in and… for us gamers the numbers do not look good.Chucking a new solid state...
Low cost, Low TDP, Office and workstation applications
Subpar gaming performance in some titles, Poorly optimized software ecosystem
We would recommend Ryzen 7 1800X for desktop and heavy workloads, such as rendering and workstation applications, but it isn't as competitive with a diverse range of game titles. Ryzen sets a low pricing bar, and the addition of the new Zen microarchi...