AMD is looking to play party pooper by today announcing an 'early [[link]] holiday promotion' for its latest Zen 5 processors as well as a 9000X3D tease, announcing the availability of its first 3D V-cache CPUs from November 7 this year.
Intel is set to launch its brand new desktop CPU platform, codenamed , this week, with an October 24 release date the [[link]] current expectation. And there's no doubt this reveal today is aimed squarely at kicking the rival chip maker just as it tries to stagger back to its [[link]] feet with a new architecture.
So, it makes absolute sense for the company to both be discounting its new CPUs so soon—especially with competition arriving from Intel this week—and officially announcing its gaming-focused X3D line.
That puts our favourite chip in the series—the —at just over $300, which does make it a mighty tempting processor for anyone upgrading their system, now it's only a little more expensive than the equivalent Ryzen 7000-series chip.
And what of the X3D processors? Well, we actually know very little about what the next generation of 3D V-cache is going to look like, but AMD's when it comes to the new implementation of the stacked cache feature.
"It's not like, hey, we've also added X3D to a chip," he tells me. "We are working actively on really cool differentiators to make it even better. We're working on X3D, we're improving it."
Which is all rather exciting, because even if AMD did just slap the same extra 64 MB of L3 cache on top of one of the CCDs we'd be looking at a great gaming CPU. Rumours are that this time around there is no reduction in clock speed for doing so—speeds were limited in the previous iterations of X3D chips—which does indeed indicate there have been changes made.
And with a launch on November 7, it's not going to be long before we find out exactly what those changes actually are and what gaming frame rates look like with the new X3D CPUs.

