At long last, AMD has officially revealed its suggested e-tailer pricing (SEP) for its initial stack of Ryzen 9000 series processors based on Zen 5, and we’d venture to guess that most of you are going to like the price points.
At long last, AMD has officially revealed its suggested e-tailer pricing (SEP) for its initial stack of Ryzen 9000 series processors based on Zen 5, and we’d venture to guess that most of you are going to like the price points. That’s because all four desktop SKUs are cheaper than what the previous generation Ryzen 7000 models launched at—up to $50 less expensive at the top end.Before we get into that, note that we just posted our dual review of the Ryzen 7 9700X and Ryzen 5 9600X that’s chock full of benchmarks and in-depth analysis. If you haven’t done so already, give it a read to see how the two mainstream SKUs stack up to the previous generation, as well as some of Intel’s 14th Gen offerings. We also compare against the Ryzen 7 7800X3D.We also go over pricing and the value proposition of those two models in our review. What about the Ryzen 9 9950X and Ryzen 9 9900X, though? AMD spilled the beans in a slide posted to X/Twitter.