The test bench included Ryzen 7800X3D/5700X3D processor, B650M Aorus Pro AX/MSI MPG B550 Gaming Plus motherboard, 32GB DDR5 RAM (16x2GB, 6200MHz, CL28)/16GB (8x2GB, 3600MHz, CL14), cooling system, be quiet! Dark Rock Pro 4/DeepCool GAMMAXX 300, RTX 3080 Ti Palit GameRock graphics card.
Below are the test results in Aida64 and Cpu-z.
The games released include Cyberpunk 2077, NFS Unbound, Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales, Call of Duty WarZone, Ghost of Tsushima, Hogwarts Legacy, Far Cry 6, The Last of Us Episode 1, A Total War Saga – Troy, CS 2.
Cyberpunk 2077 was running on ultra settings with rays. Here the difference between the 5700X3D and the 7800X3D was 30% in its favor.
NFS Unbound was also tested with the ultra preset. The difference was around 32%.
In Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales, the difference dropped to an average of 25% at maximum settings with ray tracing.
Check out all the results from the games for yourself in the video below.
In the tested games, the difference between the processors generally varies between 25% and 40%. However, judging by the numbers, it is not worth switching from 5700X3D to 7800X3D. A much more rational solution would be to buy Ryzen 5700X3D and upgrade the current system. There is no point in buying this processor without a graphics card of 4080 level and above and without needing the performance of 7800X3D.
But if system responsiveness is important to you, if you are sensitive to irregularities in the frame time graph, if you want the minimum FPS to drop as little as possible, then go for the AM5 system. Specifically, only those who know why they need so many FPS, who will use the processor for its intended purpose, or who want to have a good backup for the future should go for the 7800X3D.
Source: Ferra

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