DIYAMD65% by Neofiliac Team73% by External Reviewers

AMD Ryzen 7 5700G (5700GE)

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Photo 0of AMD Ryzen 7 5700G (5700GE)

Product Overview

AMD Ryzen 7 5700G is the flagship option in AMD's Zen 3 APU lineup. It is also available as a low-power variant in the form of 5700GE. Both are primarily marketed for OEM use.
Retaining the 7nm process of Zen 3 CPUs, the 5700G adds integrated Radeon graphics. Unlike Intel's approach, however, each AMD APU has a different iGPU: Compared to the Ryzen 3 5300G and Ryzen 5 5700G, however, the integrated Radeon graphics in this Ryzen 7 APU comes with 8 cores and runs at a higher 2000MHz frequency. The number of unified shaders and texture mapping units are boosted to 512 and 32 respectively, too.
On the processor side, the 5700G comes with 8 cores and 16 threads, and its maximum boost clock is 4.6GHz. Unlike Zen 3 CPUs, however, AMD does not uses multiple core complexes in its APUs. Therefore, the Ryzen 5 5700G's 8 cores all reside on a single die.
Per usual, the 5700G supports 24 PCIe 4.0 lanes, higher than its Intel competition.

Ratings

What we found

Neofiliac score 65%
Pros
  • 8 cores
  • Up to 4.6GHz boost clock
  • Unlocked for overclocking
  • Decent integrated graphics
Cons

    What external reviewers found

    External score 73%
    Pros
    • Excellent overclocking potential
    • Strong performance in AAA and multiplayer games
    • Compact, lightweight design
    • High-quality case
    • Very fast CPU performance
    • Competitive price for a Ryzen 5000G desktop PC
    Cons
    • Lacks integrated Vega graphics engine
    • No dedicated graphics card
    • Pricey compared to AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
    • No PCIe 4.0 lanes

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    Price Comparison

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    Specifications

    5700G5700GE

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    External Reviews

    notebookcheck[1]

    Reviewer score 67% (normalized by Neofiliac)
    Reviewers from notebookcheck have found:
    The AMD Ryzen 7 5700G is the fastest APU in AMD's lineup. It offers 8 native processing cores for the first time. With its 65 watts, the APU is relatively frugal and at the same time very fast. However, at Intel's integrated graphics unit has it increasingly difficult to assert itself against the competition.
    Pros
    • Very fast CPU performance
    • High-quality case
    • Low power consumption
    Cons
    • No dedicated graphics card
    • No integrated graphics card

    pcmag[2]

    Reviewer score 85% (normalized by Neofiliac)
    Reviewers from pcmag have found:
    This is the APU to buy if you want the best SoC graphics performance out there today. Both its AAA and multiplayer performance make it a viable option for any upstart PC gamer. A few settings tweaks in your games of choice could make the cheaper Ryzen 5 5600G a more enticing option in certain value cases.
    Pros
    • Compact, lightweight design
    • Strong performance in AAA and multiplayer games
    • Excellent overclocking potential
    Cons
    • Pricey compared to AMD Ryzen 7 5800X

    tomshardware[3]

    Reviewer score 68% (normalized by Neofiliac)
    Reviewers from tomshardware have found:
    The $256 5600G plugs the gap between the $299 Ryzen 5 5600X and, well, AMD's entire sub-$299 product stack. AMD reused the Renoir SoC design, so the 5700G comes with the 7nm Radeon RX Vega graphics engine with eight CUs, and not a newer RDNA-based design. The chip has much more thermal and power headroom in a desktop PC.
    Pros
    • Competitive price for a Ryzen 5000G desktop PC
    • Competitively priced
    Cons
    • No PCIe 4.0 lanes
    • Lacks integrated Vega graphics engine

    References

    1. ^ AMD Ryzen 7 5700G in review: 8-core desktop APU based on Zen3 with Vega graphics unit. [notebookcheck].
    2. ^ AMD Ryzen 7 5700G Review. [pcmag].
    3. ^ AMD Ryzen 7 5700G Review: Fastest Integrated Graphics Ever. [tomshardware].

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