PC builders on Team Red should have a serious soft spot for the Ryzen 7 5800X3D: it was the first consumer-grade desktop processor with 3D V-cache, where low-level memory is stacked directly on top of the CPU for a serious speed boost in games. Now it’s coming back as a limited-run Anniversary Edition, years after it was originally retired. Great news, right? Not entirely: it’s also the latest sign of a PC industry is struggling in light of the sky-high hardware costs brought about by the AI boom.
Announced at Taiwan’s Computex trade show, the 5800X3D 10th Anniversary Edition is essentially identical to the original chip, which has been out of production since 2024 and still commands a high price on the second-hand market. It’s an 8-core, 16-thread chip with 4.5GHz boost speeds, which help it keep pace with the much newer Ryzen 5 9600X – a CPU that uses the newer socket AM5.
The 5800X3D is based on socket AM4, which first debuted in September 2016 and was officially superseded by AM5 in 2022. Why keep on truckin’ with such an old platform? Because AM4 uses DDR4 memory modules, which haven’t suffered price hikes or stock shortages like the newer, faster DDR5 modules have.
Demand from datacenters looking to get in on the AI goldrush has sent the costs of consumer newer memory and SSDs stratospheric, making it financially ruinous for many gamers to upgrade their PCs right now. Component makers are instead bringing back their ‘greatest hits’ until things stabilise, allowing PC owners to squeeze an extra year or two out of their ageing hardware.
This is basically the fastest silicon for anyone that has yet to make the jump to newer hardware, and will be considerably cheaper than buying an all-new motherboard, CPU and memory. The reborn 5800X3D will launch on June 25 at $349 RRP – $100 less than the original model launched at.
The anniversary edition will also ship with a Carbice Ice Pad thermal pad – a cleaner and longer-lasting alternative to traditional thermal paste.
AMD hasn’t forgotten budget-conscious upgraders already on the newer AM5 platform either. The firm also used its Computex press conference to launch the Ryzen 7 7700X3D, the most affordable AM5 chip with 3D V-cache to date. It’s also an 8-core, 16-thread processor with 4.5GHz peak boost speed, but is build on AMD’s newer Zen4 chip architecture. It’ll set you back $329 when it goes on sale from July 16.
The other good news is that Socket AM5 isn’t going to be put out to pasture any time soon. AMD confirmed it will continue supporting the platform until at least 2029, so gamers won’t need to budget for an expensive upgrade for at least a few years.
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