AMD has finally announced cheaper Zen 3 CPUs, over a year after their high-end counterparts were released. Generally the plan has been to fill out the cheaper end of its chip stack with APUs and integrated graphics, but it's been Intel that has won the recent battles for more budget-friendly chips. The Intel Core i5 12400, for example, is a budget gaming machine. Intel also tends to get a full slate of budget CPUs out a little quicker than AMD—as today's tardy processor release shows.
AMD has announced three new Zen 3 CPUs today: the Ryzen 5 5500, Ryzen 5 5600, and Ryzen 7 5700X.
Alongside that, AMD is finally bringing the long lost Ryzen 4000-series to the desktop with the Ryzen 3 4100, Ryzen 5 4500, and Ryzen 5 4600G. These are all Zen 2-based parts and the Ryzen 5 4600G also includes integrated Radeon graphics using something akin to the Vega architecture.
Now what's interesting about all of these chips are the prices. The Zen 2-based 4000-series chips start out at $99 and reach $154 with the Ryzen 5 4600G. That could be a good pickup for a gaming PC on a budget, though remains a Vega-powered GPU onboard—we're more excited for the RDNA 2-based APUs coming out of AMD with Ryzen mobile chips for their graphical grunt nowadays, but needs must.
The 5000-series now begins at $159 and ends up at the $299 Ryzen 7 5700X. That's actually at the price the Ryzen 5 5600X demanded at launch, though it has since dropped to $230. With these new chips launching, it looks like some of the discount Ryzen 5000-series price drops we've spotted recently are here to stay.
That makes sense considering the AMD Ryzen 5 5600 is sitting at a tasty $199 MSRP.
All of which makes for more competition with Intel's cheaper chips, such as the
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