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AMD Wouldn't Send This - Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition Review

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0:00

The way I see it, you clicked on this

0:01

video for one of just three reasons. You

0:04

either want to watch tech giants in a

0:06

CPU dunking contest. You could

0:09

legitimately be shopping for the fastest

0:11

PC hardware on the planet.

0:13

Congratulations, by the way. Or most

0:15

likely, you just want to eat some

0:17

popcorn and watch the fanboys squabble

0:19

in the comments about an overpriced CPU.

0:21

Well, guess what? Buckle in tight, cuz

0:24

you're going to see all three today. The

0:26

Ryzen 9950 X3D2 Dual Edition is an

0:30

eyewateringly expensive, zero

0:32

compromised product, and I love it. It's

0:35

the perfect purebred show horse to

0:37

excite geeks like us by pushing the

0:39

limits of modern technology while also

0:41

serving as a reminder that most people

0:44

really don't need one. What everyone

0:47

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1:11

Hi. If you're wondering why this video

1:12

is a day late, well, AMD didn't send us

1:14

a chip to review, and they also didn't

1:17

send a lot of people chips to review.

1:18

Make of that information what you will.

1:20

Anyway, here is our review. Getting

1:23

right into the meat of things, I can

1:24

understand why AMD struggled to name

1:27

this chip. And they clearly did because

1:30

what is this thing? Let's break it down.

1:32

It's a 9950X, so that means you got 16

1:36

of AMD's latest Zen 5 architecture cores

1:39

and 32 threads. It's 3D, which means it

1:42

features a large stacked 3D vcache,

1:44

which can offer a major performance

1:46

benefit in certain workloads, notably

1:48

gaming. and it's two and also dual both

1:53

of which seem to mean the same thing

1:54

because compared to a regular 9950X3D

1:57

non two non-dual the big change that the

2:00

dual edition brings is that AMD's super

2:03

large 3DV cache now sits on both of the

2:06

core complex dies or CCDs that are under

2:08

the gray heat spreader rather than only

2:11

on one of them. That gives the duel a

2:13

whopping

2:14

192 MGB of level three cache. That's

2:17

enough to install Windows 95 on your CPU

2:21

three times over. Doesn't really work

2:23

like that. We just thought it was kind

2:24

of a funny thing to point out. But hold

2:27

on a second. If 3DV cache is so great,

2:29

then why didn't AMD use it across all of

2:32

their cores in the past? Well, because

2:34

there are some trade-offs. the price for

2:36

one, but also a considerable 30 watt

2:39

increase to total design power that

2:41

brings the duel to a sweaty 200 watts

2:44

that in some situations it even exceeded

2:47

by a significant margin. And this extra

2:49

power seems to have resulted in a small

2:51

decrease in boost clock speeds.

2:55

But hey, that should be more than made

2:57

up for by the extra 3D cache, right?

2:59

Especially in gaming, right? Well, let's

3:01

talk about that. Out of the gate, things

3:03

are looking good in City Skylines 2. a

3:05

game we chose more for its ability to

3:07

bring CPUs to their knees than its uh

3:10

community appeal. Here, the Duel leads

3:13

the pack with the other 9000X3D chips in

3:15

tow behind it. Makes sense. After all,

3:18

they're supposed to be good for gaming,

3:19

right? And we see the same deal in

3:21

Cyberpunk 2077. Though, it is worth

3:23

noting here that while these high

3:26

average FPS numbers here are very

3:28

impressive, when it comes to the

3:29

all-important 1% lows, which represent

3:32

the performance you can expect in the

3:34

most demanding moments, some older and

3:36

uh much less expensive chips are nipping

3:40

dangerously close to their heels. In

3:42

F124, it seems like any high-end

3:45

processor from the past couple

3:46

generations is going to do you just

3:48

fine. Shout out to the venerable 5800

3:51

X3D by the way, which is rumored to be

3:53

returning for a celebration of the AM4

3:55

socket's 10th anniversary. Then in The

3:57

Last of Us Part One, the 9950X3D2 duel

4:00

returns to the top position and is also

4:02

about as fast as it gets in

4:03

Counter-Strike 2, at least as far as 1%

4:06

lows are concerned. Across our suite of

4:08

gaming benchmarks, the Ryzen 9 9950XD2

4:11

dual edition is just plain ripping fast,

4:14

and yet still nearly impossible for me

4:17

to recommend. Why? Well, for starters,

4:20

we benchmark gaming CPUs at 1080p. This

4:23

gives us a clear view of which chips

4:25

will separate themselves from the pack

4:27

in an intentionally CPU bottleneck

4:29

situation. But if you're buying a $900

4:33

chip, you're almost guaranteed to be

4:35

running at at least 1440p, if not 4K,

4:38

where a GPU bottleneck is way more

4:41

likely than a CPU one. The second reason

4:43

is that even if you were an esports

4:45

professional trying to eek out every

4:47

last frame, I still wouldn't sell you a

4:49

duel. Because while it does have more

4:52

3DV cache goodness than anything we've

4:53

ever seen before, which is cool, in the

4:56

real world, it performs basically the

4:58

same as any of the other 9000 series X3D

5:01

chips. But why is that? Well, as some of

5:04

you might know, high-end X3D chips have

5:07

always come with kind of a weird

5:09

trade-off. They had all these cores on

5:11

them, but only some of the cores were

5:13

best for gaming, the 3D vcache ones. So,

5:16

you always wanted to make sure that your

5:18

games were running on those. To do this,

5:20

AMD uses a technique called core

5:22

parking, which unintuitively does not

5:25

stop the core from doing any work, but

5:27

rather it forces a given program to only

5:29

use specific CPU cores and then ignore

5:32

the rest. Over the past couple of years,

5:34

AMD and Microsoft have worked on

5:36

dejenifying this behavior to the point

5:38

where as long as you're running an

5:39

up-to-date chipset, BIOS, and operating

5:41

system, you should find that your 2CD

5:44

CPU is using the right cores for any

5:47

given job. That is, assuming, of course,

5:48

that Windows recognizes your games as a

5:51

game. But we have 3D Vcash on all the

5:54

cores now. So, why are we talking about

5:55

parking anything anywhere? Vroom v room,

5:57

right? Well, as it turns out, most games

6:00

just plain don't need more than eight

6:03

cores. And regardless of what type of

6:05

cache your cores have if they have to

6:07

coordinate work across multiple CCDs,

6:10

the data has to travel across the

6:12

Infinity Fabric and the IO die, which is

6:15

going to introduce extra latency. So,

6:17

the solution, the same jank we were

6:20

already using, core parking. And that is

6:23

why the new dual edition performs

6:25

basically exactly the same in gaming. So

6:28

then who is it useful for? Well, for

6:30

starters, anyone who might run multiple

6:33

workloads that benefit from extra cache.

6:35

A great example would be someone who

6:36

wants to stream or record their gameplay

6:39

while they're gaming without burdening

6:41

their GPU. A more niche benefit is that

6:43

overclockers and system tuners could

6:46

identify which of their CCDs runs the

6:48

fastest and then put their most

6:50

performance sensitive workloads on those

6:52

cores. Or at least that would be an

6:54

option if AMD and Windows allowed you to

6:57

choose. From our testing, it seems that

6:59

games are locked to CCD0 for the time

7:01

being. Another focus for AMD's marketing

7:03

for this chip is a claimed 5 to 10%

7:06

increase in productivity. Let's take a

7:08

look at that. And unsurprisingly, the

7:11

Ryzen 9 9950 X3D2 dual edition Core 2

7:14

dual extreme max plus the sequel is an

7:17

absolute monster here as well. In 7zip,

7:19

the duel has a clear lead over any other

7:21

consumer CPU both in compression and in

7:23

decompression. And in Cinebench, it sits

7:26

at the top of the chart or darn near it

7:27

in both multi-core and single core

7:29

performance. The only problem is that

7:31

its closest competitor is uh

7:35

five $550 cheaper at retail right now.

7:39

Uh but hey, those are kind of just

7:41

benchmarks, right? And if you're in the

7:43

market for a CPU this expensive, you

7:45

probably want to get some real work done

7:46

with it, right? Where in Blender, the

7:48

dual edition does manage an as

7:50

advertised 5% improvement over its less

7:53

endowed twin and a considerable 15ish%

7:57

over the 7950 X3D. This is one of the

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