Review: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D

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AIDA64 and CPUZ:

First of all, if you haven’t already done so, we invite you to read the page dedicated to the protocol in order to understand the different profiles present in the BIOS of our ROG Maximus Z890 APEX concerning the 14th Gen Intel processors as well as the new Core Ultra 200S. The idea behind choosing our benchmarks is mainly to be able to run them at home so that you can compare your readings with ours.

AIDA 64 :

This is a piece of software capable of providing you with a great deal of information about your configuration, but above all it has a memory benchmark. This calculates the read, write and copy speeds, as well as the latency, of your memory kit. It is often used to compare memory kits. It’s an excellent tool if you want to compare the performance of your memory kit with those we’ve already tested. The version used for testing is v7.35.7030 beta.

There’s nothing surprising in the results: we’re talking about performance that is equivalent to or slightly better than that of the Ryzen 9900X and 9950X.

CPUZ 17.01.64 benchmark :

Using it couldn’t be easier: just download the latest version of CPU-Z, which is currently version 2.11. Then go to the ‘ Bench ‘ tab to check single-thread and multi-thread performance. The benchmark version we used is 17.01.64.

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For the various benchmarks, we’ll be taking a look at the performance of the Ryzen 9 7950X3D, as well as the Ryzen 9 9950X. The single-core score has improved significantly, and the multi-core score has risen from 15748 to 17261 on this new generation.