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AMD Ryzen 5 7600X Benchmarks Appeared: Processor 20% More Powerful than Intel Core i9-12900K

Yesterday, July 29, WCCF TECH journalists, citing a user with the nickname TUM_APISAK, published the results of testing the six-core AMD Ryzen 5 7600X processor on the Zen 4 architecture, which unexpectedly appeared in the UserBenchmark benchmark lists. The TUM_APISAK enthusiast found a new AMD processor in the synthetic test database (we are talking about an engineering sample with an index of 100-000000593-20_Y), which was previously seen in the Basemark GPU benchmark. This processor runs on six processing cores with twelve threads on the latest architecture and a clock speed of 4.4 GHz.

In the benchmark, it was noticed that this processor was overclocked by the manufacturer to 4.95 GHz, but this is probably far from the final overclock, since there have already been tests on the network with Ryzen 7000 series processors that have overcome the psychological barrier of 5.0 GHz. And although the synthetic UserBenchmark test is clearly biased towards Intel processors, the latest AMD Ryzen 5 7600X is almost head and shoulders ahead of its potential competitor in the face of the flagship Intel Core i9-12900K. Based on these results, the Ryzen 5 7600X scored 243 in the single-core test, while the Core i9-12900K scored just 200. This means that in a single-core test, the upcoming AMD processor will be 20% more powerful than the current Blue Team flagship.

The reason for such a significant increase in performance in the synthetic test is most likely the new Zen 4 architecture, thanks to which AMD cores will be more powerful than competitors from Intel. Moreover, the difference with the previous generation of AMD processors is also significant – if you compare the Ryzen 5 7600X with the Ryzen 5 5600X, the new one turned out to be 55% more powerful than its older counterpart in a single-core test. However, the advantage over Intel may well be leveled by the end of the year – AMD plans to release AMD Ryzen 7000 processors in September, and in October Intel will already launch its thirteenth generation of Core processors.

Source: Trash Box

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