Technology
The AMD Ryzen 7000 Non-X Family will be available from January

AMD intends to show off its future Ryzen 7000 (Non-X) processors at CES 2023. Videocardz was able to secure a few internal slides that were most likely for this occasion.
In any event, these slides validate a recent pricing leak and provide insight into the performance of these CPUs. Furthermore, AMD has announced that the Ryzen 7000 Non-X family will be available on January 10th, 2019.
Ryzen 7000
This isn’t the first time we’ve heard about these CPUs. Someone recently evaluated these yet-to-be-released devices in Geekbench; more about that here. In addition, Videocardz published a few additional slides about these CPUs, which corroborated the cost.
The Ryzen 7000 Non-X CPUs will be available for purchase on January 10th, 2023, according to the presentation. The reviews are scheduled to go up the day before.
The Ryzen 9 7900 has 12 cores and 24 threads, similar to its X-counterpart, and a 65W TDP, as do other CPUs in this series. All for the low price of $429.
In terms of core/thread counts, the Ryzen 7 7700 is identical to the 7700X and will cost $329. Last but not least, at $229, the Ryzen 5 7600 is AMD’s most affordable Zen4 product to date. However, when pitted against Intel‘s Raptor Lake options (non-K), this CPU will face stiff competition.
Performance
The generational leap in gaming performance is pretty evident, with the Ryzen 9 7900 outperforming the 5900X by up to 31%. Keep in mind that the 7700 consumes 65W of electricity while the 5900X consumes 105W. Things are no different for content developers. According to AMD, Zen4 Non-X is up to 48% quicker than Zen3-X.
According to the statistics we obtained from Videocardz, Zen4 is the way to go right now. However, once you include in the platform cost, it quickly becomes prohibitively costly.
In any event, DDR5 memory provides the Ryzen 7000 a tiny advantage over the Ryzen 5000, which only supports DDR4 memory. When coupled with the same system, the Ryzen 9 7900 is 19% quicker on average than the Ryzen 9 5900X. (Apart from the memory).
Games | Ryzen 9 7900 (65W) DDR5-6000 Radeon RX 6950XT |
Ryzen 9 5900X (105W) DDR4-3600 Radeon RX 6950XT |
7900/5900X |
Assassin’s Creed: Valhalla | 197.0 FPS | 191.0 FPS | 103% |
Borderlands 3 | 248.9 FPS | 209.1 FPS | 119% |
CS:GO | 603.6 FPS | 516.0 FPS | 117% |
F1 2021 | 403.8 FPS | 299.7 FPS | 135% |
Far Cry 6 | 176.3 FPS | 131.6 FPS | 134% |
Fortnite | 270.9 FPS | 247.3 FPS | 110% |
League of Legends | 387.4 FPS | 349.6 FPS | 111% |
Metro Exodus | 187.1 FPS | 185.4 FPS | 101% |
Shadow of the Tomb Raider | 283.8 FPS | 224.6 FPS | 126% |
Strange Brigade | 442.7 FPS | 339.8 FPS | 130% |
Total War: Three Kingdoms Battle | 256.1 FPS | 198.8 FPS | 129% |
World of Tanks Encode (1080p Ultra) | 445.5 FPS | 405.4 FPS | 110% |
AVERAGE | 119% |
Ryzen 7000 Product Lineup
CPU | Cores/Threads | TDP | Cache | iGPU CUs | iGPU Clock | CPU Clocks | MSRP |
Ryzen 9 7950X3D | 16/32 | 170W | 192MB (64MB L3 + 128MB Stacked L2) | – | – | Similar to Non-X3D Counterpart | $699″}”>>$699 |
Ryzen 9 7950X | 16/32 | 170W | 80MB (16MB L2 + 64MB L3) | 2CUs | 2.2GHz | 4.5GHz/5.7GHz | $699 |
Ryzen 9 7900X3D | 12/24 | 170W | 192MB (64MB L3 + 128MB Stacked L2) | – | – | Similar to Non-X3D Counterpart | $549″}”>>$549 |
Ryzen 9 7900X | 12/24 | 170W | 76MB (12MB L2 + 64MB L3) | 2CUs | 2.2GHz | 4.7GHz/5.6GHz | $549 |
Ryzen 9 7900 | 12/24 | 65W | 76MB (12MB L2 + 64MB L3) | 2CUs | 2.2GHz | -/5.4GHz | $429 |
Ryzen 7 7700X3D | 8/16 | 105W | 96MB (32MB L3 + 64MB Stacked L2) | – | – | Similar to Non-X3D Counterpart | $399″}”>>$399 |
Ryzen 7 7700X | 8/16 | 105W | 40MB (8MB L2 + 32MB L3) | 2CUs | 2.2GHz | 4.5GHz/5.4GHz | $399 |
Ryzen 7 7700 | 8/16 | 65W | 40MB (8MB L2 + 32MB L3) | 2CUs | 2.2GHz | -/5.3GHz | $329 |
Ryzen 5 7600X | 6/12 | 105W | 38MB (6MB + 32MB L3) | 2CUs | 2.2GHz | 4.7GHz/5.3GHz | $299 |
Ryzen 5 7600 | 6/12 | 65W | 38MB (6MB + 32MB L3) | 2CUs | 2.2GHz | -/5.1GHz | $229 |