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AMD may revive the Ryzen 7 5800X3D with an anniversary edition | Collector
AMD may revive the Ryzen 7 5800X3D with an anniversary edition
PCWorld

AMD may revive the Ryzen 7 5800X3D with an anniversary edition

If you’re trying to build a PC in 2026, I feel bad for you, son. I’ve got 99 problems… and most of them tie back to the same “AI” bubble that’s making computers ridiculously expensive . Though some older parts are also going up in price, many are falling back on AMD’s perennial AM4 platform with cheaper processors, motherboards, and DDR4 RAM. In a normal PC market, a manufacturer might celebrate a big anniversary milestone with special merchandise. This time around, it looks like AMD is going to just straight-up re-release the Ryzen 7 5800X3D. A leak on the corpse of Twitter spotted by VideoCardz.com shows an “AMD AM4 Anniversary Edition” with “10 years” elsewhere on the logo. Other promotional text is written in Chinese. Celebrating the AM4 makes sense. It had remarkable longevity even before all the current nonsense, getting steady-if-diminishing CPU releases across Ryzen generations since its debut way back in September 2016. The Ryzen 5800X3D might just be the most notable release in the line, as it was the first one to feature dedicated 3D V-Cache for boosting performance in games and other 3D applications. The X3D series was a smash hit , getting tons of chips at different price points, and continues into the AM5 era . That said, the 5800X3D was released almost four years ago , so the timing is a little off for an “anniversary edition.” Presumably this is celebrating AM4 as a platform and not this specific chip. Which isn’t to say it’s obsolete—despite being well surpassed by the Ryzen 7000 and 9000 series, the 5000 is more than capable of most tasks and even mid-range gaming in 2026. And with the renewed interest in more affordable components (“affordable” being a relative term, of course ), it makes sense for AMD to try and drum up some interest, maybe squeeze out a little more production from those 7-nanometer foundries before they’re reconfigured, or just clear out existing stock. Assuming this leak is legit, it seems like AMD is looking to attract some cash-strapped buyers. We don’t know whether it’s just for China or part of a broader push. There don’t appear to be many if any 5800X3D chips still available at retail here in the US, though there are plenty of 5000-series CPUs to be had.

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