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.
Users
(90%)
12 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
850100422
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Published: 2017-05-08, Author: Mark , review by: arstechnica.com
Remarkable multithreaded performance, More core and threads than the competition, 1600X on par with a stock i5 7600K in gaming, The full-featured AM4 platform, Excellent value for money
Questions remain over gaming performance, Some early adopter quirks linger, Overclocking not as strong as Kaby Lake
Abstract: Rising from the ashes of disappointment, AMD has finally returned to the high-end CPU market with a new portfolio that challenges the best of Intel and with prices that's hard to ignore. The Summit Ridge Ryzen 1800X is currently the fastest processor that...
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Published: 2017-04-16, Author: Tomas , review by: hw4all.com
According to the comparison results in most games we can see a slight difference in the results between the processors AMD Ryzen 7 1800X and Intel Core i7-7700K. No surprises in the form of AMD is no advantage, except for CPU tests 3DMark. In real Core i7...
Well, the Ryzen 7 launch has a surprising amount of excitement and drama mixed together with the impressive numbers but with memory issues and game performance causing very polarized opinions on social media and on websites like Reddit. AMD fans even...
Published: 2017-04-11, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
We have already shown in previous reviews that the Zen microarchitecture from AMD is around the equivalent of Intel's Broadwell microarchitecture, but at this lower price point we have AMD's Zen against Intel's Kaby Lake, which is two generations newer th...
Ryzen 7 vs. IntelIt is certainly not an easy task to classify the Ryzen CPUs. The octa-core chips convince with dream results in the synthetic benchmarks and even beat much more expensive rivals with ease.However, we cannot give a full recommendation, bec...
Published: 2017-03-30, Author: Dave , review by: hothardware.com
In our initial review of the Ryzen 7 series processors, we saw much lower than expected performance from AMD's new processor line-up than we did with Intel's in the DirectX 12-based Ashes Of The Singularity benchmark. This was especially prominent when te...
Published: 2017-03-29, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: This week MSI finally released an updated BIOS for the X370 XPOWER GAMING TITANIUM that we've been using for a majority of our Ryzen Linux benchmarks. With that motherboard improving memory compatibility and allowing us to finally run the board at higher...
Great Multi Thread performance, Solid Gaming Performance, Nice Overclocking room on 1700, Easy clock adjustment with Ryzen Master, Price, Power Efficiency, Experience
Near Heart Attack levels of Excitement
Don't let negative vibes fool you. AMD has released an excellent design that far surpasses what the release was like of the FX-8350 years ago. If it wasn't for Ryzen 5, I'd tell everyone to get a Ryzen 7 1700. If you can use 8 cores though, you should...
AMD processors are competitive again, Outstanding performance in heavy multi-threaded apps, Cheaper than Intel HEDT processors, Single-threaded performance improved, Low power draw and excellent power efficiency, Platform updated to include latest feature
Horrible motherboards / BIOS, feels not ready for market, Limited game performance, Memory frequency options and memory compatibility limited, Setup complicated (memory, HPET, CCX, SMT, and power profile), Overclocking barely worth it, Requires optimized
The AMD Ryzen 7 1800X currently retails for $499. AMD processors are competitive again Outstanding performance in heavy multi-threaded apps Cheaper than Intel HEDT processors Single-threaded performance improved Low power draw and excellent power effi...