AMD claims the gaming crown with its Ryzen 5000 series of processors
AMD can finally beat Intel at gaming! - Allegedly
Published: 8th October 2020 | Source: AMD |
AMD claims the gaming crown with its Ryzen 5000 series of processors
We will detail AMD's Zen 3 architecture further in a future article. Right now our focus is on gaming, where AMD now claims to possess a performance lead over Intel.
With Zen 3, AMD has radically designed several aspects of their processors to deliver significant single-threaded performance gains. Zen 3 isn't about adding more cores to their Zen lineup; Zen 3 is about single-threaded performance leadership, which is great news for PC gamers.
When compared to the company's Zen 2-based Ryzen 9 3900XT, AMD's newly announced Ryzen 9 5900X offers gamers 26% more gaming performance on average across a large number of titles at 1080p. With Counter-Strike: Global Offensive (CS:GO) Zen 3 delivers a huge 46% performance gain, highlighting how some games will respond better to architectural changes than others.
Zen 3 is AMD's best gaming architecture to date, and it will hurt Intel in an area which has long been considered a key advantage for the company. With Intel's Rocket Lake processors coming in 2021, it looks like AMD will hold leadership in the gaming market for a while.
When compared to Intel's i9-10900K, AMD claims to offer PC gamers higher framerates across a variety of popular games, with League of Legends offering AMD a 21% performance lead.
While many of AMD's performance leads are marginal, it is undeniable that Zen 3 will gain market share for Ryzen within the gaming market. It cannot be understated how much the gaming market means to the enthusiast PC market, making any performance wins here a great thing for the Ryzen brand.
With promises of strong single-threaded performance improvements, Zen 3 promises to deliver significant performance gains across all major workloads. In this regard, Zen 3 is AMD's most groundbreaking iteration of its Zen architecture to date, promising generational improvements beyond that of Zen 2.
As always, our recommendation is to wait for 3rd party benchmarks and reviews before believing AMD's "gaming leadership" claims. Even so, the fact that AMD can make these claims speaks volumes. Only time will tell whether or not they are completely accurate.
AMD's Ryzen 5000 series of Zen 3 processors will launch on November 5th worldwide.
You can join the discussion on AMD claiming gaming leadership with its Ryzen 5000 series of Zen 3 processors on the OC3D Forums.
Most Recent Comments

Honestly I think I would actually be wasting my money, It has a 20% perf boost over Zen 2 at 1080P, I don't play at 1080P, I play at 3440x1440 so I'm pretty sure I'd see zero gain.Quote
Honestly I think I would actually be wasting my money, It has a 20% perf boost over Zen 2 at 1080P, I don't play at 1080P, I play at 3440x1440 so I'm pretty sure I'd see zero gain.
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Not even so much I thought it would be better, but the fact they are now literally competing with themselves and have managed to shove up the prices.
Don't get me wrong it's impressive, but is it impressive enough in anything else other than low res gaming to really justify itself? I don't think so.
Sure, you might shave a few seconds from a render, but they are not cheap.
Also £300 for their entry level gaming CPU? yeah, too much IMO. The 10600k is cheaper (£248 as I type this).
I guess the real big impressive lift will be 5nm. I was just expecting too much out of this perhaps? IDK.Quote
Other than price it is fairly impressive and a bigger gain than I was expecting.Quote