Testseek.com have collected 422 expert reviews of the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X 3.6GHz Socket AM4 and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Ryzen 7 1800X 3.6GHz Socket AM4.
March 2017
(85%)
422 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(90%)
12 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
850100422
The editors liked
Sufficient IO and modern standards
Incredible multi-core performance
Great choice for video editing and image rendering applications
Published: 2017-03-02, Author: Tom , review by: overclock3d.net
From start to finish the Ryzen 7 1800X was a revelation and you can't begin to understand how happy it makes us.This isn't an AMD processor that you have to find the good points of. This isn't an incrementally better one which requires some give and take...
Published: 2017-03-02, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: For those craving some Linux gaming benchmarks from the newly-released AMD Ryzen 7 1800X processor, here are some test results. In this initial comparison are benchmarks of the Ryzen 7 1800K to Core i7 7700K when running these processors at stock speeds w...
Published: 2017-03-02, Author: Michael , review by: phoronix.com
Abstract: The day many of you have been waiting for is finally here: AMD Zen (Ryzen) processors are shipping! Thanks to AMD coming around at the last minute, I received a Ryzen 7 1800X yesterday evening and have been putting it through its paces. Here is my walkthr...
Published: 2017-03-02, Author: Marco , review by: hothardware.com
Strong Overall Performance, 8-Cores / 16-Threads, Power Friendly, Aggressive Pricing
Issues In A Few Benchmarks, Unimpressive Overclocking In Early Stages
It's not all good news, though. With some legacy apps, audio encoding, lower-res gaming, and platform level tests, Ryzen trailed Intel – sometimes by a wide margin. There is obviously still optimization work that needs to be done – from both AMD and softw...
Huge performance leap over previous-generation AMD FX processors, Trades blows with Intel's Core i7-6900K at half the price, Very price-aggressive motherboard options
Requires dedicated graphics card, Single-core performance lags behind competing Intel "Kaby Lake" chips, Chipsets don't have as many PCI Express/SATA ports as Intel's offerings, Gaming performance at 1080p lags behind Intel, at least for now
With the $499 Ryzen 7 1800X, AMD makes a Godzilla-size step back into the battle for consumer-CPU supremacy. We measured speeds on par with Intel chips that cost twice as much. Plus, the chipset/motherboard platform packs most of the features we want, at...
Any of the Ryzen 7 series processors will be fine for whatever you want to do with it. Even the cheapest of them all (the Ryzen 7 1700) which we have not reviewed but hopefully will test in the coming weeks, will offer you a nice gaming experience and the...
Published: 2017-10-10, Author: Alex , review by: gizmodo.com.au
This is a question I keep mulling over. If you're building a brand new PC and investing in a new motherboard then the 8th Generation Intel Coffee Lake processors are worth a look. Particularly if you game o...
Right at this moment, the decision to buy a 6900K over the 1800X is extremely difficult - there just isn't that much more you get for an extra $500 over the 1800X - and that fact has shaken the CPU market. Not to mention, the two other much less expensiv...
Abstract: I'm going to start this article off with a simple number: five. Not only is that the number of months it has taken AMD to effectively turn the x86 processor world on its ear, but that's also the number of distinct model families that they've introduced...