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AMD Ryzen 9000 "Zen 5" Desktop Processor Pricing and Availability Confirmed

btarunr

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AMD, with a post on X confirmed the pricing and availability of its new Ryzen 9000 "Granite Ridge" desktop processor models. These were supposed to launch on July 31, but faced a delay, and are now facing a staggered launch. The 8-core Ryzen 7 9700X and 6-core Ryzen 5 9600X will be available from tomorrow, August 8, 2024. The flagship 16-core Ryzen 9 9950X and 12-core Ryzen 9 9900X follow a week later, on August 15. The company also confirmed pricing of the four chips in USD SEP. The Ryzen 9 9950X is confirmed with a $650 price, followed by the Ryzen 9 9900X at $500, the Ryzen 7 9700X at $360, and the Ryzen 5 9600X at $280. These are slightly cheaper than their predecessors, with the 7950X, 7900X, 7700X, and 7600X, launching at $700, $550, $400, and $300, respectively.



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I doubt SEP is single exit price as vendors get to choose how much they charge for stuff, so what’s SEP
 
I doubt SEP is single exit price as vendors get to choose how much they charge for stuff, so what’s SEP
If my understanding is correct, SEP is the price at which retailers buy from AMD. Then the retail price will be the SEP + tax/markup/etc and that'll be what us consumers will pay.
 
What's SEP? At first, I thought it was September, but since the CPUs will be available now-ish and next week, it doesn't add up. :slap:
 
If my understanding is correct, SEP is the price at which retailers buy from AMD. Then the retail price will be the SEP + tax/markup/etc and that'll be what us consumers will pay.
SEP in the context of AMD's prices means "suggested etail price"

 
According to the CoinBrain calculator, 1 SEP is $0.00016469
I've been looking at the SEP price, and it jumps to ~ $0.00025429 and back every few seconds. Is the US dollar that unstable?
 
If those are retail launch prices, then they're very good imo, especially for 9900x/9950x. Just to clarify, 9900x has a 2x6 structure, and 9800x 1x8, right ?
 
If those are retail launch prices, then they're very good imo, especially for 9900x/9950x. Just to clarify, 9900x has a 2x6 structure, and 9800x 1x8, right ?
Probably, and it's 9700X. 9800X is likely reserved for X3D as is in Ryzen 7000.

But yes, it's looking good.
 
SEP in the context of AMD's prices means "suggested etail price"

Suggested E-tail Price*

The correct formatting is necessary, or it makes it look like AMD was making a joke on their website or something.
 
Cool, but i think most people are waiting for the 3D variants to come together with the launch of the 800 series motherboards.

However AMD might be in for a great sales periode. Here i thinking of new cpu's combined with Intels 13/14 gen problems, could boost AMD'S cpu sales in the coming months.
 
Cool, but i think most people are waiting for the 3D variants to come together with the launch of the 800 series motherboards.

However ADM might be in for a great sales periode. Here i thinking of new cpu's combined with Intels 13/14 gen problems, could boost amd cpu sales in the coming months.
It is mostly only gamers that benefit from the X3D variants.
 
It is mostly only gamers that benefit from the X3D variants.
I know and aint most people gaming on there pc among other things they do.

Sure there will be people who can't wait or just don't know better.

But i think amd most popular models will be the 3D variant over all.
 
I know and aint most people gaming on there pc among other things they do.

Sure there will be people who can't wait or just don't know better.

But i think amd most popular models will be the 3D variant over all.
I'm definitely gonna upgrade my 3600 with a 9800X3D.
 
I'm definitely gonna upgrade my 3600 with a 9800X3D.
Depending on reviews and pricing (including how much I can sell 7800X3D for), I will likely upgrade my 7800X3D to the 9800X3D.
 
I'm definitely gonna upgrade my 3600 with a 9800X3D.
That's a nice upgrade there. :)

Depending on reviews and pricing (including how much I can sell 7800X3D for), I will likely upgrade my 7800X3D to the 9800X3D.
I'm not sure if that'd be worth the cost. Single generational improvements can hardly be felt outside of benchmarks these days. Of course, we'll see when reviews hit, but I'm not planning the same. Zen 6 X3D maybe.
 
That's a nice upgrade there. :)


I'm not sure if that'd be worth the cost. Single generational improvements can hardly be felt outside of benchmarks these days. Of course, we'll see when reviews hit, but I'm not planning the same. Zen 6 X3D maybe.
I agree; it mostly depends on if it makes a difference in game performance.

If they are single-figure percentage improvements, I will wait for the third-gen AM5 (10800X3D?).
 
Surprised positively by their pricing, also their TDP doesn't look bad.
 
I'm definitely gonna upgrade my 3600 with a 9800X3D.
As i said, i wount be surprised if most of the zen 5 chips are 3D variants.
 
9900X priced $50 less than what the 5900X was at when I got one. I enjoy the increased speed of using handbrake on my 5900x over the old 4670k I was running. I'd be interested in upgrading, but I'm pretty content with what I have now. Also it doesn't help that I have no monies for such an upgrade (CPU/MB/RAM) considering I have to get a new water heater. Reality keeps me in check when I start to feel that slight upgrade itch coming along.
 


7600X and 7900X reviews just released.
 
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