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Ryzen 3 2200G is great for extreme budget gaming and HTPC use

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Sometimes the best products aren’t the most cutting-edge parts, or even the fastest parts. The best computer processor for example is the one that fits your needs, at a price you can afford. AMD has frequently been the darling of budget PC builders, and while it often requires sacrificing some performance, for the price it’s tough to complain. Last year’s Ryzen 3 1200 and 1300X were
Sometimes the best products aren’t the most cutting-edge parts, or even the fastest parts. The best computer processor for example is the one that fits your needs, at a price you can afford. AMD has frequently been the darling of budget PC builders, and while it often requires sacrificing some performance, for the price it’s tough to complain. Last year’s Ryzen 3 1200 and 1300X were reasonably priced, and ultimately forced Intel to come out with the Core i3-8100—a major upgrade in CPU performance relative to the previous generation i3-7100. The one potential drawback with the Ryzen 3 CPUs was that they required a dedicated graphics card. AMD finally addresses that shortcoming with its Ryzen 3 2200G APU, and it even comes in at a slightly lower price than the outgoing parts.
Test System Hardware
AMD AM4 APU Testbed MSI B350I Pro AC 16GB G. Skill Flare X DDR4-3200 CL14 16GB G. Skill Ripjaws V DDR4-2400 CL15 Samsung 960 Evo 500GB Enermax Steelwing Enermax Revolution SFX 650W
AMD AM4 CPU Testbed Gigabyte Aorus X370 Gaming 5 16GB GeIL Evo X DDR4-3200 CL16 Samsung 960 Evo 500GB Enermax Ostrog Lite Enermax Platimax 750W Enermax LiqMax II 240
Intel LGA1151 Testbeds Gigabyte Aorus Z370 Gaming 7 MSI Z270 Gaming M7 16GB G. Skill TridentZ DDR4-3200 CL14 Samsung 960 Evo 500GB Corsair Carbide Air 740 Corsair HX750i 750W Corsair H115i
I reviewed the Ryzen 5 2400G earlier this week, and I included results for the Ryzen 3 2200G as well. My biggest complaint with the 2400G is that it ends up being priced a bit too high to really hit the sweet spot I was hoping for. It’s a bit slower on the CPU side than a Core i3-8100, and the graphics are a bit slower than a GT 1030 (give or take depending on the game). Combined with the need for higher performance DDR4 memory to reach its full potential, I don’t think it’s the budget APU most users will want. The Ryzen 3 2200G has no such problems, however, with a price of only $100 and performance that’s more than acceptable for light gaming and other workloads.
I covered the main design aspects of the Ryzen APUs in the 2400G article, so I’m mostly going to focus on the performance and value proposition of the 2200G here. The stock specs include a 3.5 to 3.7GHz 4-core/4-thread CPU (losing the SMT functionality), 4MB of L3 cache, and integrated Vega 8 graphics—that’s eight CUs, or 512 streaming processors. It ends up a bit slower than the 2400G across nearly all tests, but then it also costs about a third less. That’s a great tradeoff for an extreme budget build.
As with the other Ryzen processors, the Ryzen 3 2200G comes fully unlocked, for both the CPU and GPU. I haven’t had a chance to fully push the GPU yet, but initial results suggest that with faster RAM and a 20-25 percent overclock, it can basically match the stock performance of the 2400G’s Vega 11 solution. On the CPU, I hit a stable 3.9GHz, which is also the same limit I hit with the 2400G—going any further would require a better cooler than the stock AMD Spire, and that’s not something I’d recommend putting money into for a budget PC.
The other CPUs were tested with the hardware shown in the box on the right. Everything used DDR4-3200 CL14 memory, though I did test the 2400G with a more affordable DDR4-2400 CL15 kit to see how that impacts performance. While it doesn’t change the CPU performance much, it causes about a 15-20 percent drop in gaming performance, and that should also be true of the 2200G when paired with budget RAM. You’ll definitely want to spend a bit more to get faster DDR4 if possible (eg, this kit of Patriot CL16 DDR4-3200 only costs $10 more than the DDR4-2400 kit I used for testing). Of course, given current RAM prices, 16GB is almost certainly overkill—8GB is far more practical, and I’ll give a sample build near the end of the article to show what can be done.
I’ve left the extreme Core i9 and Threadripper processors out of the charts, and the Core i7 and Ryzen 7 are also in a different league. The 2200G is a budget processor, priced to move, and it delivers the goods. Combined with a mini-ITX or micro-ATX motherboard, you can build a complete PC for about the same price as a Core i7-8700K (especially once you add in a CPU cooler). On the graphics side, I’ve included the GTX 1050, GTX 1050 Ti, RX 560, and Intel’s HD 630—I’ll see about running some additional tests on AMD’s previous generation A10-7870K in the near future, but didn’t have time for this initial review. It’s no surprise that all the dedicated GPUs I’ve tested are faster, since they also cost more than the 2200G (especially at the currently inflated GPU prices).
Ryzen 3 2200G gaming performance
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On the gaming side of things, the 2200G with high-end RAM is slightly faster than a 2400G with budget RAM. Again, definitely don’t go with the cheapest RAM you can find if you’re hoping to get the most of the integrated GPU. The 2200G is also more than twice as fast as Intel’s latest HD Graphics 630. Neither solution is going to handle the latest games at higher quality settings and 1080p or higher resolutions, but I did some additional 1080p low testing and the 2200G gets above 30fps in the majority of games. Lighter fare is even better, so CS:GO for example easily runs at more than 60fps average (though periodic stutters and dips below 30fps are still present for some reason).
The difficulty with integrated graphics isn’t something that’s going to go away in the immediate future, at least not without increasing the cost. The chief problem is the need to share both power and memory bandwidth with the CPU. While it’s theoretically possible to have an APU with two or three times the GPU cores as the 2200G (Ryzen 7 2700G with Vega 24, anyone?), graphics processing tends to be extremely bandwidth hungry. Dual-channel DDR4-3200 can manage about 64GB/s, a chunk of which goes to the CPU, whereas even a modest GTX 1050 has about twice that much dedicated bandwidth.
Intel’s upcoming Kaby Lake-G with Vega M graphics is certainly one way of doing things, with a 4GB HBM2 stack on the package, but the cost for those chips is likely going to be over three times the price of the 2200G. Long-term, as process technology continues to shrink and we get even more transistors to work with, we’ll probably on-die or on-package memory, and prices for such things will eventually come down. But until then, APUs like the 2200G will work best as entry-level gaming solutions—or as something for HTPC use, where the low power use and high integration are great to have. Ryzen 3 2200G application performance
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In non-gaming tasks, there’s not much to say that I haven’t already said.

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