Ryzen 9 5950X, 5900X test leaks continue to show AMD dominance

Ryzen 9 5950X, 5900X test leaks continue to show AMD dominance

A recently discovered benchmark list on the Geekbench database shows that AMD's upcoming Ryzen 9 5950X and 5900X processors significantly outperform Intel's Core i9-10900K rival. Twitter leaker @TUM_APISAK reported the benchmark results for the two future Ryzen 9 5000 series processors on the online Geekbench database, showing the dominant performance of these two processors in the popular benchmark suite.

Geekbench 5AMD Ryzen 9 5950X1575 - 13605https://t.co/zzaR6h6zWYAMD Ryzen 9 5900X1605 - 12869https://t.co/n8Lp2EEzHTO Oct 20, 2020 In single-core performance, the 5950X reportedly scores 1575 points while than the 5900X it scores 1605. In multi-core performance, the 5950X scored 13.605 and the 5900X 12.869. It should be noted that the 5950X seems to have better multi-core performance than the 5900X, while the 5900X has a slightly higher single-core result than the 5900X.

Will AMD Ryzen 5000 Series Overwrite Intel Comet Lake Processors?

There was already considerable anticipation surrounding AMD's Zen 3 processors, which are scheduled to launch on November 5, but the anticipation continues to grow as new benchmarks point to the performance of the new processors. Earlier this week, TUM_APISAK discovered benchmarks for the Ryzen 5 5600X that showed it beating Team Blue's Core i5-10600K. Now, as broken down into Hexus, the Ryzen 9 5950X and 5900X are looking to dominate a bit over Intel's competing Comet Lake processor, the Core i9-10900K. In the Geekbench results database, the Intel Core i9-10900K processor scores 1393 for single-core performance and 10869 for multi-core performance. This makes the 5950X roughly 13% and 25% faster in single-core and multi-core performance, respectively. Meanwhile, the 5900X runs about 15% and 18% faster in single-core and multi-core performance, respectively, compared to the i9-10900K. We haven't tested the chips ourselves yet, so we can't independently verify that these performance comparisons hold up, but if they do, Intel will feel the heat.