Tuesday, August 13th 2024
Mindfactory Only Sold a Few Dozen AMD Ryzen 7 9700X and Ryzen 5 9600X
German PC components online retailer Mindfactory is no Amazon, but is meticulously transparent with its sales data to the public, which allows us to gauge consumer interest in products, at least in the European context. AMD last week launched its Ryzen 7 9700X and Ryzen 5 9600X Socket AM5 desktop processors powered by the latest "Zen 5" microarchitecture, which were met with mixed reviews, with the tech press remarking on very little IPC gain over the previous "Zen 4" generation, which is salvaged somewhat with their better energy efficiency. It's been 5 days since market availability for these two chips, and they aren't exactly flying off the shelves over at Mindfactory.
Remember what we said about Mindfactory being transparent with its sales numbers? The retailer even puts out a counter of how many units of a product it sold, and how many page views a product's store page got. As of this writing (13/8, 15:00 UTC), Mindfactory sold just between 20-30 Ryzen 5 9600X processors, with just under 600 page views for the product. The Ryzen 7 9700X is very slightly better, but not by much—just 30-40 pieces sold, and under 1,200 page views. To give you some context, the Ryzen 7 7800X3D, which has been out since April 2023, sold close to 68,000 units on this store. HardwareTimes reports that the 9700X is #39 most popular processor on Amazon in August 2024, and #45 on Newegg. We guess what's happening here is a combination of consumers waiting to see how the 9900X and 9700X perform, what the 9000X3D series and Intel's next-generation bring to the table, and favoring previous-gen incumbents such as the 7800X3D, i9-14900K, etc., which have had price cuts over the past several months.
Sources:
Mindfactory listing for 9600X, Mindfactory listing for 9700X, HardwareTimes
Remember what we said about Mindfactory being transparent with its sales numbers? The retailer even puts out a counter of how many units of a product it sold, and how many page views a product's store page got. As of this writing (13/8, 15:00 UTC), Mindfactory sold just between 20-30 Ryzen 5 9600X processors, with just under 600 page views for the product. The Ryzen 7 9700X is very slightly better, but not by much—just 30-40 pieces sold, and under 1,200 page views. To give you some context, the Ryzen 7 7800X3D, which has been out since April 2023, sold close to 68,000 units on this store. HardwareTimes reports that the 9700X is #39 most popular processor on Amazon in August 2024, and #45 on Newegg. We guess what's happening here is a combination of consumers waiting to see how the 9900X and 9700X perform, what the 9000X3D series and Intel's next-generation bring to the table, and favoring previous-gen incumbents such as the 7800X3D, i9-14900K, etc., which have had price cuts over the past several months.
62 Comments on Mindfactory Only Sold a Few Dozen AMD Ryzen 7 9700X and Ryzen 5 9600X
i found a great deal for 7950x3d for only 450$ which is definitely better in gaming and multitasks than 9900x and cheaper
I haven't been paying much attention to CPUs until recently but I hear from those that do that AMD commonly drops the price pretty quickly after release. This might have some bearing on the lackluster sales right now as well.
What’s more interesting about the 9000X3D chips will be allowed “overclocking”. If consumers are allowed to push frequencies up, or the manf. process simply allows higher clocks along with new temperature sensor adjustments, performance all around should theoretically look a lot nicer.
The 9900X/9950X will be pretty strong productivity skus, and largely more interesting than the R5/R7 parts.
They also did this with the Zen 4 series and it actually pushed me to buy intel -- had the X3D been out at that time I would have bought that - but it was a choice of a $450 7700x + $200 DDR5 + $250 AM5 board, and at that time AM5 had a bunch of stuttering and Bios issues -- or the $50 less for a 13700KF setup. The gaming performance and productivity is still way better on the 13700 so that's what I got.
Initial sales of Zen 4 were hot garbage as a result. They had to start bundling and giving away ram kits to move dies. AMD decided to repeat that self own again, because the first time wasn't enough.
If they released 9800X3D that was 10% faster than 7800X3D right now they would be MOPPING up market share as people flee intel's degrador lake.
do people just not care to pay attention anymore?
It's 25% slower.
Who heads AMD marketing? Please go seek new career challenges elsewhere!
Fun fact(s):
MF sells the 7500F (tray) at less than 50% of the 9600X price, the 7700 (tray) is also 25% cheaper than a 9600X, and according to the TPU review beats it both in application performance and energy efficiency. If you prefer boxed versions for the proper warranty, you typically still pay less for the 7700 (boxed) or the 7700X (boxed) than the 9600X (boxed).
MF also sells the 7900 (boxed), 7900X (boxed) and the 7800X3D (boxed) for roughly 10% less than the 9700X right now.
It would have been even worse, if the larger German retailers hadn't decided to hike prices by 5% to 10% after the announcement of the Zen5 delays. The 7800X3Ds (boxed) had been below €330 at that point.
1) The earlier statement is from an interviewat Tom's Hardware. This is when AMD said it would be a really close call... 2) Statement no. 2 is newer and I already linkedit above. This is when AMD told Overclock3D at a tech event just a couple of weeks before the launch of Zen 5 that 9700X would in fact beat 7800X3D by 2%.
And, yes, it turned out that 9700X is much slower by a considerable margin so people are RIGHTFULLY disappointed by the poor gaming performance compared to AMD's false advertising. If you look outside of TPU, where the 9700X is uncharacteristically strong compared to the rest of the web, then 25% as stated by @phanbuey might be the worst case for 9700X but we are typically definitely in a range of 15% to 20% average below the 7800X3D.
What is might? It's either faster or slower!overclock3d.net/news/cases_cooling/amd-ryzen-7-9700x-beats-prior-x3d-cpus-even-without-3d-v-cache/
On OC3d as well it's pretty vague!
People need to actually read what’s being presented to them. If there’s and outright lie or questionable performance result with the 9000 series, it’s handbrake; afaik AMD has yet to disclosed how they tested Zen5 in their benchmark suite.
Flagship models first, the rest of the lineup second.
As nVidia does.