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The next generation of AMD gaming CPUs is the last generation of AMD gaming CPUs. With astronomical RAM prices gatekeeping gamers from upgrading, the chipmaker has released its former best-in-class AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D for a price better than whatever you’ll find on eBay.
The ever-popular Ryzen 7 5800X3D will re-release for $349 on June 25. AMD is also launching its Radeon RX 9070 GRE globally to try and keep graphics card pricing down.
At $521.31, Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) looks like a stock where the bullish setup still has room to run. The stock ripped roughly 25% in the week after Q1 earnings. Thus, Wall Street is still catching up to what the inference cycle means for the rare chipmaker selling both the CPU and the GPU at
Computex 2026 has begun and AMD have revealed multiple new bits of hardware - so here's what you need to know.
ABP News on MSN
AMD Brings Back Fan-Favourite CPU, Drops News Ryzen Gaming Chips, Extends AM5 Support Till 2029
AMD used the stage at Computex 2026 to make a series of announcements aimed at gamers, PC builders, and workstation users, unveiling new Ryzen processors, expanding graphics card availability, and extending its AM5 platform roadmap through 2029.
AMD is preparing two new desktop processors with 3D V-Cache, covering both the older socket AM4 platform and the current socket AM5 ecosystem. The most notable model is the Ryzen 7 5800X3D Anniversary Edition, which brings back one of AMD’s most popular ...
AMD expanded its gaming hardware lineup at Computex 2026 with the launch of new Ryzen processors and a Radeon graphics card, targeting gamers seeking affordable
(Corrects story in paragraph 9 to reflect that AMD CEO Lisa Su did not go to Taiwan for the Computex event next week) By Eduardo Baptista and Liam Mo BEIJING, May 29 (Reuters) - When AMD CEO Lisa Su arrived in China last week just days after Nvidia's CEO left,
The FPS Review on MSN
Carbice's carbon nanotube thermal pad lands in an AMD retail box for the first time, Noctua to distribute standalone pads this September
Thermal paste has been a consumable since PC builders first started slathering it on heatspreaders in the 90s, but a company called Carbice wants to change that. Today, the Atlanta-based thermal interface material developer announced two retail partnerships that put its carbon nanotube pads directly in the hands of consumers for the first time: a