Review: AMD Ryzen 7 5700G

by Tarinder Sandhu on 3 August 2021, 14:01

Tags: AMD (NYSE:AMD)

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Conclusion

...having a capable Ryzen chip with a decent IGP works on multiple fronts right now.

Introduced in OEM form in April this year, AMD's decision to release two Ryzen 5000G Series chips for the DIY market is a sage move.

Desktop Ryzen 7 5700G is built using eight of the latest latest Zen 3 CPU cores allied to Radeon Graphics from the Vega generation. That familiar recipe is already in existence for the high-performance laptop market under a number of chips assembling beneath the Cezanne architecture banner.

Effectively a laptop chip repackaged into the desktop AM4 form factor, Ryzen 7 5700G naturally does well on the CPU side and offers basic gameplay credentials from the iGPU, besting Intel's best by up to 2x.

Going down the Cezanne route does have minor downsides, however, as the SoC runs off PCIe 3.0 and chips carry half the L3 cache present on the latest tranche of full-on desktop Ryzens.

Priced at around £329, the Ryzen 7 5700G's qualities mean its target market is niche. Power users tend to run with discrete video cards, but such is the state of play with GPU stock shortages, having a capable Ryzen chip with a decent IGP works on multiple fronts right now. Enthusiasts can choose this chip and wait for premium graphics cards to become more affordable.

Primed for high-quality SFF and HTPC builds first and foremost, the arrival of Ryzen 7 5700G to retail offers DIY builders yet more choice and represents a good decision from AMD.

The Good
 
The Bad
Excellent CPU peformance
Restrained power
Good for SFF and HTPC builds
Having IGP offers even more choice
Reasonable value, all things considered
 
No PCIe 4.0 support
Half L3 cache of latest Vermeer Ryzens
IGP still based on older technology



AMD Ryzen 7 5700G

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The AMD Ryzen 7 5700G will be available on August 5 from Scan Computers.

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At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



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HEXUS Forums :: 33 Comments

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So basically its around the same performance as a Ryzen 7 3700X/3800X but with a decent IGP?? However,at the current price,it probably better to get a Ryzen 7 5800X,or a Ryzen 7 3700X if you need 8 cores(seen the latter for as low as £200ish on HUKD).

OTH,it probably makes more sense in an HTPC or a prebuilt desktop.

Edit!!

It seems the IGP is around an RX550 level or a bit better:
https://www.techspot.com/review/2293-amd-ryzen-5700g/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oTVZgRUbMg
I was just going to say I think I'd rather a 3700X + £100 towards a GPU, assuming we're not looking at a dGPU-less build in which case it seems ‘reasonable’
Well this is exactly what I was hoping would come out when I went down the x570 iTX route with my home server, currently on a 3400G so knowing when I want to add more cores I can do so that's me sorted, the iGP isn't overly important as it gets no use other than letting me run no actual GPU which means less heat and stuff blocking airflow..
Intel i9-11900k - 332watts. LOL
Rob_B
I was just going to say I think I'd rather a 3700X + £100 towards a GPU, assuming we're not looking at a dGPU-less build in which case it seems ‘reasonable’

£100 for a gpu? Good luck with that, round here (Warwick) there is nothing up to date enough with drivers for £200 let alone £100 and the cards that do come into stock go straight away