
AMD
Ryzen 5 7600XBudget-friendly 6-core Zen 4 processor with strong gaming performance. 65W TDP and included cooler make it easy to build with.

AMD
Ryzen 7 9800X3DThe ultimate gaming CPU with 2nd-gen 3D V-Cache technology. 8 cores with 104MB of total cache delivering unmatched gaming frame rates across all titles.
How They Compare
The AMD Ryzen 5 7600X is priced at $199.99 in the CPUs category. It stands out with tdp, boost clock advantages over the competition. It's designed with gaming and budget in mind.
The AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D is priced at $479.99 in the CPUs category. It stands out with cache, cores, threads advantages over the competition. It's designed with gaming in mind.
Key Differences
What this means: Higher tdp indicates greater power draw and heat output. This directly impacts your power supply requirements, cooling solution choice, and electricity costs. Lower values generally mean a cooler, quieter, and more efficient build.
What this means: This cache spec directly impacts features and capabilities for cpus. The product with the higher value here will have an advantage in scenarios where this specification is the limiting factor. Consider whether this specific spec matters for your workload — not every spec difference affects every use case equally.
What this means: This cores spec directly impacts features and capabilities for cpus. The product with the higher value here will have an advantage in scenarios where this specification is the limiting factor. Consider whether this specific spec matters for your workload — not every spec difference affects every use case equally.
What this means: This threads spec directly impacts features and capabilities for cpus. The product with the higher value here will have an advantage in scenarios where this specification is the limiting factor. Consider whether this specific spec matters for your workload — not every spec difference affects every use case equally.
What this means: Higher base clock means faster data processing and better real-world performance. Even small differences in clock speeds can translate to measurable FPS gains in CPU-bound games and faster completion times in productivity tasks.
What this means: Higher boost clock means faster data processing and better real-world performance. Even small differences in clock speeds can translate to measurable FPS gains in CPU-bound games and faster completion times in productivity tasks.
What this means: Newer architecture typically delivers better performance per watt, new feature support, and improved efficiency. Architecture improvements often matter more than raw clock speed — a newer architecture at lower MHz can outperform an older one at higher MHz.
What this means: Better cooling keeps components at lower temperatures, which prevents thermal throttling, extends lifespan, and allows higher sustained boost clocks. Even a few degrees can mean the difference between a part running at full speed or downclocking under heavy load.
Spec Breakdown
Full Specification Comparison
9 specs| Specification | Ryzen 5 7600X | Ryzen 7 9800X3D |
|---|---|---|
| TDP | 65W | 120W |
| Cache | 38MB | 104MB |
| Cores | 6 | 8 |
| Socket | AM5 | AM5 |
| Threads | 12 | 16 |
| Base Clock | 3.9 GHz | 4.7 GHz |
| Boost Clock | 5.3 GHz | 5.2 GHz |
| Architecture | Zen 4 | Zen 5 (3D V-Cache) |
| Included Cooler | Yes (Wraith Stealth) | No |
The Bottom Line
At $199.99, the Ryzen 5 7600X is the most affordable option. It takes the lead in tdp and boost clock. Tagged as Budget Pick.
- Lower power draw at 65WW
- Higher boost clock (5.3 GHz)
- Lower cache (38MB)
- Fewer cores (6)
- Fewer threads (12)
- You want a cooler, more power-efficient build
- You want the higher boost clock for better performance
- Budget is your top priority
- You need better cache
- You need more cores for multi-threaded workloads
At $479.99, the Ryzen 7 9800X3D is the premium option. It takes the lead in cache and cores. Tagged as Best Value and Best Performance and Premium Pick.
- Better cache (104MB)
- More cores (8)
- More threads (16)
- Higher base clock (4.7 GHz)
- Higher power draw at 120WW
- Lower boost clock (5.2 GHz)
- You want the stronger cache
- You need 8+ cores for your workload
- You want the best bang for your buck
- You want lower power draw — 120WW is too high
- You need better boost clock