Testseek.co.uk have collected 318 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 3.6GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 90%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 3.6GHz Socket AM4.
July 2019
(90%)
318 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
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0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
900100318
The editors liked
Improved IPC
Massive multi-core performance
Continues AM4 support
Blurs the lines between gaming and HEDT
Very good on power
Wide choice of X570 boards
Superb productivity performance in multi-threaded and single-threaded workloads
Excellent value compared to Intel competitors
Manageable power consumption with excellent efficiency values
Precision Boost 2 algorithm works very well
Strong high-speed m
Clear IPC advancement over Zen+
Reasonably priced
Vastly better memory performance
Decent overclocking potential
65W TDP ensures cooling isn't a huge task
Incredible price to performance
Affordable
Included cooler
Incredible performance
Cheaper than Intel equivalents
Power-efficient design
The editors didn't like
Don't overclock fantastically
Gaming performance is still slower than Intel Coffee Lake at the ultra-high-end
Platform cost is high due to expensive X570 motherboards
Maximum frequency capability is limited compared to Intel
Even when overclocking
High power draw at idle
Single-threaded performance still falls behind Intel
Incredible performance, Cheaper than Intel equivalents, Power-efficient design
Higher temperatures than the second-gen Ryzens
Even at stock speeds, the Ryzen 7 3700X is fantastically powerful for its price. It can do pretty much anything the Core i9-9900K can do, and for £200 less: that's the kind of CPU deal I haven't seen since the original Ryzen 7 1800X undercut half of Intel...
Incredible price to performance, Affordable, Included cooler
Single-threaded performance still falls behind Intel
The AMD Ryzen 7 3700X is another impressive release from AMD and its 3rd Generation of Ryzen chips. You're getting 8-cores and 16-threads, with a boost clock of 4.4GHz. On paper, that's not the most impressive chip ever made, but when you see the actual p...
Published: 2019-07-20, Author: Richard , review by: eurogamer.net
NextRead the Eurogamer.net reviews policySometimes we include links to online retail stores. If you click on one and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. For more information, go here.Jump to comments (33)About the authorRichard LeadbetterTe...
The shift from Ryzen 7 2700X to Ryzen 7 3700X has been a major step towards snatching the performance gaming market. AMD has ironed out the bugs, totally turned around on memory support, and put together a product that excels in the same, budget-friendly...
Improved IPC, Massive multi-core performance, Continues AM4 support, Blurs the lines between gaming and HEDT, Very good on power, Wide choice of X570 boards
Don't overclock fantastically
AMD impressed the technology world when it debuted the Zen CPU architecture a couple of years ago. Immediately competitive in multi-threaded applications and reasonable at gaming, executives were bombastic about future Zen designs improving upon the muscu...
Published: 2019-07-07, Author: Luke , review by: kitguru.net
Superb productivity performance in multi-threaded and single-threaded workloads, Excellent value compared to Intel competitors, Manageable power consumption with excellent efficiency values, Precision Boost 2 algorithm works very well, Strong high-speed m
Gaming performance is still slower than Intel Coffee Lake at the ultra-high-end, Platform cost is high due to expensive X570 motherboards, Maximum frequency capability is limited compared to Intel, even when overclocking
AMD's Zen 2 architecture in the Ryzen 3000 CPUs has delivered its side of the deal and the ability to squeeze twelve cores into a 105W package, thanks to smart design and the 7nm TSMC FinFET process, makes the Ryzen 9 3900X a success. The new AM4 flagship...
Published: 2019-07-07, Author: Peter , review by: eteknix.com
I'm torn on which CPU is the best deal here. The Ryzen 7 3700X is the best all round for gaming I would think. It doesn't run as hot, and it uses less power. However, 8 cores is more than enough for 99% of the PC gamers out there, and the performance and...
Abstract: It's an exciting time for AMD, too. The red team has been on a roll with its CPUs since the first generation of Ryzen arrived back in 2017. Now we're two ranges down, and the firm is promising big changes – and big competition for market leader Intel.So...
A relative weakpoint of the Ryzen series so far as been memory performance. Latency and bandwidth has always lagged behind its Intel counterparts, however, in the latest series AMD seems to have come on leaps and bounds, reducing its memory latency to les...
If you're toting a powerful GPU and are aiming for super-high frame rates to drive your high refresh rate monitor, then there are still some instances were Intel is a tad better. Dota 2 saw marginal gains over AMD, and as we suspected, the higher frequenc...