Testseek.com have collected 269 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 7 2700 3.2GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 82%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 7 2700 3.2GHz Socket AM4.
May 2018
(82%)
269 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
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0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
820100269
The editors liked
Strong multi core performance
Compatible with previous AM4 motherboards
Solid transcoding performance
Overclocks close to 2700X
The editors didn't like
– Wraith Spire cooler won't really support an overclock
Reviews
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Published: 2018-04-19, Author: Ian , review by: anandtech.com
Abstract: With 2017 finished, and Ryzen being very successful for AMD, the inevitable question was due: what happens next? Early in 2018, the plans were laid bare: a second generation Ryzen processor was set to come in mid-year, followed by a second generation Thr...
Published: 2018-04-13, Author: Jeff , review by: Techreport.com
Abstract: The leaks have been flying hard and fast for weeks, but this morning, AMD is officially taking the wraps off its second-generation Ryzen CPUs. Four new chips have been waiting in the wings, and they'll be available for pre-order around the world starting...
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Published: 2017-08-10, Author: Steve , review by: gamersnexus.net
By name and by marketing, the i5 CPU is most comparable to the R5 CPUs. The R5 2600's current $160 price-point makes it a less direct comparison, and the 2600X, which would perform about where an overclocked 2600 performs, is about $220. This is also...
Great value, Huge multi-thread performance, Overclockable,
Slower single-core performance than Intel, Poor overclocking headroom,
It's the same old story. AMD's latest chips are great value for certain tasks but less so for others. You get masses of multi-thread performance, but single-thread and gaming performance trails Intel's rival processors a little...
Abstract: It's the age-old question that has spurred endless debate: AMD or Intel? Today, that rivalry has reached new heights with AMD's Ryzen 2000 Series, often referred to by users (but not AMD) as "Ryzen 2," competing against Intel's 8th Gen "Coffee Lake" for d...
Faster than previous-gen Ryzen models, Bundled cooler adds value, Backward compatibility with 300-series motherboards, Indium solder improves thermal transfer
Needs a better cooler for overclocking, No value-oriented 400-series motherboards yet, Large performance deficit compared to a stock Ryzen 7 2700X
AMD's first-generation "non-X" Ryzen processors were universally hailed as budget champions. That changes with the company's 2000-series CPUs, though. Its Ryzen 7 2700 is only $30 cheaper than the 2700X. Given a choice between them, we'd rather have the f...
Published: 2018-05-16, Author: Andrew , review by: techteamgb.co.uk
Abstract: Is there any reason to buy an Intel CPU now that the AMD Ryzen 2700 and 2600 are out? Or even reason to get the X variants (2700X & 2600X)? Lets benchmark them and find out! Want one? Amazon 2700: prourls.co/5u0q Amazon 2600: prourls.co/0gwh Products show...
Published: 2018-05-06, Author: Peter , review by: eteknix.com
For the desktop PC gamer, the higher TDP X models are still the go-to for gaming and general performance though. They're a little faster, and a little more expensive, but you get what you pay for. However, if heat and power are a big concern to you, and t...
Published: 2018-05-06, Author: Peter , review by: eteknix.com
I can see the Ryzen 5 2600 and the 2600X fast becoming the most popular chips of the second generation Ryzen launch. They're fast, they're affordable, and they're easy to keep cool and overclock. I mean, if you're just doing a massive amount of rendering...
There are some positives and negatives to take away from this review of the Ryzen 7 2700, and we'll start with the latter. Sadly, it won't overclock to Ryzen 7 2700X speeds (going by our samples), meaning that the small price difference between the two is...