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₹ 50,500
Kaizad Billimoria | 16 Jan 2025 11:25 AM
Imagine you’re building a gaming PC, and you’re torn between raw horsepower and clever design. AMD’s Ryzen 7 9800X3D doesn’t just walk into the room—it swaggers in, leans on the bar, and casually orders a drink called “Cache on the Rocks.” It’s the kind of processor that doesn’t scream “look at my GHz” but rather winks and says, “I know how to use them.”
This isn’t just another chip vying for top-dog status. With its innovative second-gen 3D V-Cache technology, AMD isn’t playing by the same rules anymore—it’s rewriting them. Instead of chasing ridiculous clock speeds or cramming in more cores, they’ve done something smarter: packed a ton of cache right where the CPU can actually use it. The result? Games don’t just run fast—they run smooth, like butter on a hot skillet.
But hey, nothing’s perfect. The Ryzen 7 9800X3D is aimed squarely at gamers, leaving creators and multitasking power users a little underwhelmed. So, is this chip a genius or a one-trick pony? Let’s dig into the details and find out if this silicon is the key to your next gaming rig or just a very expensive flex.
AMD’s Zen 5 architecture isn’t just an evolution—it’s a revolution. This design focuses on efficiency and raw power, making it a leap over the already impressive Zen 4. Key upgrades include improved branch prediction, wider execution paths, and smarter scheduling, which collectively ensure the processor handles tasks with the finesse of a brain surgeon and the speed of a race car.
The standout feature here is the 2nd Generation 3D V-Cache technology. AMD has moved the extra cache from sitting on top of the cores (as in the previous generation) to beneath them, thanks to a technique called Through-Silicon Vias (TSVs). This change isn’t just academic—it significantly improves heat dissipation, meaning the processor can run at higher sustained speeds without thermal throttling.
The 104MB of total cache ensures that frequently accessed data is right where the processor needs it, cutting down latency and speeding up repetitive tasks. It’s like moving your coffee machine next to your desk
The Zen 5 architecture allows the Ryzen 7 9800X3D to be overclocked as the redesign means most of the heat that the cores generate will no longer be built up where the previous V-Cache rested. It comes with a base clock of 4.7GHz and a boost clock of 5.2GHz! Like the Ryzen 9900X (₨ 40,181), the 9800X3D (₨ 50,500) has been rated at 120W. This is a notable upgrade from the 65W that the previous 9700X (₨ 31,671) ships with. With the pricing closer to the 9900X, it is also important to note that the 9900X has 12 cores instead of 8.
When we run through the FPS numbers, this is where things get interesting. Titles that rely heavily on the GPU hardly see a point or two upgrade. In F1 2024 we averaged 127fps compared to 123fps on the 9700X. Cyberpunk averaged at 105fps compared to 103. So the difference isn’t extremely huge.
Cinebench scores 1343 which is a marked improvement over the 1247 that the 9700X(105W) put out. Blender reflected a bigger gap with the 9800X3D scoring 154 while the 9700X(105W) only managed 132. It’s a significant upgrade but we are not sure if it justifies the price.
For competitive gamers, the 1% lows (minimum frame rates) are where this chip really shines. Even in fast-paced shooters like Counter-Strike 2 or Apex Legends, frame rates stay consistently smooth, avoiding stutters that could ruin your aim.
Gaming aside, the Ryzen 7 9800X3D flexes its muscles in creative tasks:
1.Video Editing and Rendering: In Adobe Premiere Pro, 4K timeline scrubbing is seamless, while exporting a 10-minute 4K video is up to 15% faster compared to its predecessor.
2.3D Rendering: Blender benchmarks show a 20% improvement in render times, making it a viable option for artists and animators.
Multitasking: Running multiple apps—say, Photoshop, Chrome with 30 tabs, and Spotify—feels effortless.
The clever cache placement does wonders for thermals. During stress testing, the Ryzen 7 9800X3D rarely crossed 80°C with a decent air cooler, and with liquid cooling, it stayed well within safe limits even under sustained loads.
Efficiency is another feather in AMD’s cap. The 120W TDP ensures that even with heavy gaming or editing workloads, the processor isn’t gulping power like a sports car guzzling premium fuel. Compared to Intel’s Core i9, it’s noticeably more energy-efficient, making it a smart choice for those conscious of power consumption or running quieter setups.
The Ryzen 7 9800X3D isn’t just another processor—it’s a mic drop. AMD has taken its winning formula, sprinkled in some architectural wizardry, and delivered a chip that’s as comfortable in a gaming rig as it is in a workstation. Is it perfect? Not quite. You’re paying a premium for that fancy cache tech, and while the performance gains are tangible, they might not blow your socks off if you’re upgrading from a Ryzen 7 7800X3D. But for anyone coming from an older CPU—or daring to defect from Intel—it’s an upgrade worth every penny.
In an industry where Intel’s Raptor Lake chips are stiff competition, the Ryzen 7 9800X3D carves its niche with clever engineering rather than brute force. It doesn’t chase higher core counts or extreme clock speeds but instead refines how a CPU processes data for better responsiveness and efficiency. So, is the Ryzen 7 9800X3D the best gaming CPU on the market? Pretty much. It’s fast, efficient, and cool—both thermally and metaphorically. Just don’t expect it to make you a better gamer. That’s on you.
A small step up in FPS numbers, a giant leap in processing! The 9800X3D is a bit pricey though...