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.
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...
Highly competitive multithreaded performance, Competes against Intel's top tier CPUs, Supplied with RGB Cooler, Fully featured platform, 8/16 cores threads priced lower than the competition, Significantly improved performance per watt, Smart technologies
Can be beat in memory intensive applications, Not quite as fast clock for clock, Specific memory requirements
There we have it, the tests are in and Ryzen 7 gives a great right hook to the Blue team. In highly threaded performance, the 1800X often falls right between the i7 6900K and the i7 6950X. Considering its launch price is £489/$499. In some results, the 18...
Abstract: I'm going to start this article off with a simple number: five. Not only is that the number of months it has taken AMD to effectively turn the x86 processor world on its ear, but that's also the number of distinct model families that they've introduced...
Looking back at how things played out over the course of this review, I have no doubt it will be one of the most hotly debated articles that I've written in the last few months, maybe even the last year. There's no denying that the Zen architecture has pr...
Ive been in this industry for the better part of 15 years now and in all that time, I cant remember an instance when theres been so much excitement building over a product launch. AMD didnt help the situation out by layout out an endless trail of cook...
Performance, Overclocking, Perf per watt, Pricing, New platform, Improved single thread performance, DDR4
Did not go higher than 4.1GHz
After running through the testing and spending some quality time with the Ryzen R7 1800X, R7 1700X, and the R7 1700, I can't get Aerosmith's song "Back in the Saddle" out of my head! It's been a while since the AMD faithful had something to really get exc...