The ultimate gaming chip on a budget? That's what we were hoping for out of the , which did live up to the hype, except it only launched in a handful of Micro Center stores. Now, it looks like AMD might be launching another promising mid-range chip in the 5 9600X3D, though I'm not holding my breath for a global launch just yet.
The Ryzen 5 9600X3D has been spotted in no less than (spotted by , via ). The chip is mentioned within [[link]] the SI driver for the Radeon AI Pro R9700, included in a list of all compatible processors with this specific driver package.
Existing Ryzen 9000-series X3D chips don't see a dramatic drop in clock speed for the use of 3D V-Cache, unlike their predecessors. This is one of the key improvements with the newer 3D V-Cache chips. In fact, the Ryzen 9 9950X3D maintains the same speeds as its non-3D V-Cache version. The Ryzen 9 9900X3D boosts only 100 MHz lower than the Ryzen 9 9900X.
By that logic, we can expect to see clock speeds largely maintained between the 9600X and the proposed 9600X3D, which is good news for gaming performance. The even better news is that we should expect another 64 MB slice of L3 cache loaded under the existing six-core CCD, for a total of 96 MB.
That's a lot of rapidly accessible L3 cache for a mid-range processor. The impact of which should be huge on gaming performance. Our pals at Tom's Hardware managed to snag a in 2023 and found it easily outperformed the Ryzen 5 5600X in games and very nearly reached the lofty performance of the . Our Nick also tested the , which is an 8-core chip, but recommends it for its affordability and top-tier performance.
All promising signs for the Ryzen 5 9600X3D. Now, if only AMD would give us a more promising sign that this chip is set to launch anytime soon. Lisa Su, Frank Azor—any news you'd like to share?

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