Monday, March 10th 2025

AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D Leaked PassMark Score Shows 14% Single Thread Improvement Over Predecessor
Last Friday, AMD confirmed finalized price points for its upcoming Ryzen 9 9950X3D ($699) and 9900X3D ($599) gaming processors—both launching on March 12. Media outlets are very likely finalizing their evaluations of review silicon; official embargoes are due for lifting tomorrow (March 11). By Team Red decree, a drip feed of pre-launch information was restricted to teasers, a loose March launch window, and an unveiling of basic specifications (at CES 2025). A trickle of mid-January to early March leaks have painted an incomplete picture of performance expectations for the 3D V-Cache-equipped 16 and 12-core parts. A fresh NDA-busting disclosure has arrived online, courtesy of an alleged Ryzen 9 9950X3D sample's set of benchmark scores.
A pre-release candidate posted single and multi-thread ratings of 4739 and 69,701 (respectively), upon completion of PassMark tests. Based on this information, a comparison chart was assembled—pitching the Ryzen 9 9950X3D against its direct predecessor (7950X3D), a Zen 5 relative (9950X), and competition from Intel (Core Ultra 9 285K). AMD's brand-new 16-core flagship managed to outpace the previous-gen Ryzen 9 7950X3D by ~14% in single thread stakes, and roughly 11% in multithreaded scenarios. Test system build details and settings were not mentioned with this leak—we expect to absorb a more complete picture tomorrow, upon publication of widespread reviews. The sampled Ryzen 9 9950X3D CPU surpassed its 9950X sibling by ~5% with its multi-thread result, both processors are just about equal in terms of single-core performance. The Intel Core Ultra 9 285K CPU posted the highest single-core result within the comparison—5078 points—exceeding the 9950X3D's tally by about 7%. The latter pulls ahead by ~3% in terms of recorded multi-thread performance. Keep an eye on TechPowerUp's review section; where W1zzard will be delivering his verdict(s) imminently.
Sources:
CPUBenchmark.net Comparison, x86deadandback Tweet, VideoCardz, Wccftech, Tom's Hardware, Club386
A pre-release candidate posted single and multi-thread ratings of 4739 and 69,701 (respectively), upon completion of PassMark tests. Based on this information, a comparison chart was assembled—pitching the Ryzen 9 9950X3D against its direct predecessor (7950X3D), a Zen 5 relative (9950X), and competition from Intel (Core Ultra 9 285K). AMD's brand-new 16-core flagship managed to outpace the previous-gen Ryzen 9 7950X3D by ~14% in single thread stakes, and roughly 11% in multithreaded scenarios. Test system build details and settings were not mentioned with this leak—we expect to absorb a more complete picture tomorrow, upon publication of widespread reviews. The sampled Ryzen 9 9950X3D CPU surpassed its 9950X sibling by ~5% with its multi-thread result, both processors are just about equal in terms of single-core performance. The Intel Core Ultra 9 285K CPU posted the highest single-core result within the comparison—5078 points—exceeding the 9950X3D's tally by about 7%. The latter pulls ahead by ~3% in terms of recorded multi-thread performance. Keep an eye on TechPowerUp's review section; where W1zzard will be delivering his verdict(s) imminently.
14 Comments on AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D Leaked PassMark Score Shows 14% Single Thread Improvement Over Predecessor
Anyone who is looking at X3D is not looking at Intel.
Aside from overclocking there are so many variables that could cause a 2-3% performance swing in one direction or another, individually in some cases. That's why reputable publications put so much effort into maintaining comparable test systems for comparing across different platforms.
Your statement may end up being accurate, but right now (unless you have some inside information), you don't have sufficient evidence to support it.
While it's fairly accurate that Lion Cove is indeed the strongest type of core right now, the fact that the 285K has many latency problems that it's predecessor doesn't have doesn't help it much either. There's more than a few applications my 13900KS will beat it, never mind this one.
Intel needs to execute Panther Lake flawlessly to get back in the saddle, but I don't expect them to win at least until Nova Lake. There's no use denying, AMD is indeed ahead.
What about Gamer's Nexus, who also just posted their review and showed the same result?
And Tom's Hardware, Hardware Unboxed, der8auer, they're all participating in this "BIG LIE" as well?
Considering that their results are consistent with one another, they would need to be part of a grand conspiracy in which they're agreeing on the false results they're going to publish, wouldn't they?
And what is their incentive to lie? If your explanation is just that "they're all paid shills, I don't have any evidence but trust me bro", that's just unhinged, paranoid, delusional
EDIT: Ah, just checked your post history. Literally 9 comments, all of them vigorously "debunking" negative reports about Intel. Interesting.
If one opted to buy it, they should pretty much just go enjoy the thing and forget about benchmark charts lol
Extra points for keeping all other components the same :rolleyes: