Wednesday, February 5th 2025
AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D CPU Accounts for Almost 90% of "Zen 5" Sales, Rest of 9000 Series in Trouble
Based on the MindFactory sales data for January 2025, we have seen AMD push a significant share of sales and revenue at the German PC hardware store. However, an interesting observation lies in the details. AMD's Ryzen 7 9800X3D CPU was the best-selling SKU at 8,390 units sold. An entire AM5 platform recorded sales of 18,410 units, which puts the eight-core X3D SKU on the top, with 46% of consumers on the AM5 platform going with this CPU. The rest of the AMD Ryzen 9000 series performed poorly, with other SKUs reaching only up to 3% of AM5 socket sales. This means that out of 100% "Zen 5" units sold, the leading Ryzen 7 9800X3D SKU captured 87% of sales. The AMD Ryzen 9000 series is performing exceptionally only due to its only available AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D SKU selling 46% of the AM5 volume.
Among standard Ryzen 9000 series SKUs, the Ryzen 7 9700X achieved 640 units in sales, while the Ryzen 5 9600X, Ryzen 9 9950X, and Ryzen 9 9900X recorded 250, 230, and 180 units respectively. These figures suggest significantly lower market penetration for non-X3D variants in the retail channel. The data points to a clear market preference for gaming-optimized processors, indicating AMD's strategic focus on X3D variants—despite their higher manufacturing costs and retail premiums—is likely to continue. While MindFactory's sales data represents just one retailer in the German market, the overwhelming consumer preference for the 9800X3D over standard Zen 5 SKUs signals that consumers are ready to pay a premium for more performance and that the X3D effect reflects positively on the sales.
Among standard Ryzen 9000 series SKUs, the Ryzen 7 9700X achieved 640 units in sales, while the Ryzen 5 9600X, Ryzen 9 9950X, and Ryzen 9 9900X recorded 250, 230, and 180 units respectively. These figures suggest significantly lower market penetration for non-X3D variants in the retail channel. The data points to a clear market preference for gaming-optimized processors, indicating AMD's strategic focus on X3D variants—despite their higher manufacturing costs and retail premiums—is likely to continue. While MindFactory's sales data represents just one retailer in the German market, the overwhelming consumer preference for the 9800X3D over standard Zen 5 SKUs signals that consumers are ready to pay a premium for more performance and that the X3D effect reflects positively on the sales.
30 Comments on AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D CPU Accounts for Almost 90% of "Zen 5" Sales, Rest of 9000 Series in Trouble
Ryzen 7600 €193 - 9600X €277
7700 (tray) €273 - 9700X €372
7900X €408 - 9900X €474
Both should look in to making a core that targets high clocks
Things will improve for 9000-series overall once 7000-series stock dries up.
If it was designed as an overall improvement or, heck, even was priced at Zen 4 levels, it would sell well enough.
The fact that the IOD is the same is also a huge drag for these chips.
I do need that AVX512 for my software. The only real feature for the ryzen 9000
Mindfactory could sell much more if they were not *** (very bad word) and only sell to german shipping addresses. other germany based shop sell to neighbour countries. I do not want to pay a dubious service to temporarily buy a german shipment address.
I think those 9800x3d sales are only from those high end gamers. For computing tasks I would buy a 16 core ryzen processor with or without 3d cache.
nvidia 4080 super or similar paired with a 500 € asus mainboard with the best "gaming cpu" according to harwareluxx.de / computerbase.de / techpowerup / pcgameshardware.de to name a few sites.
The 9950X is better than the 7950X, and the 9700X is better than the 7700X - both at very similar prices. The problem is that the 7000-series got good launch reviews, whilst the 9000-series got bad launch reviews.
It doesn't matter that the 9000-series has newer, excellent reviews after the BIOS updates and windows patches, Search engines favour the more popular launch-day reviews which were fumbled by AMD.
They could have just made 9700 and 9800X with the X implying additional V-Cache, no need for the "3D" in the suffix anymore.
I would also argue that the 12-core X3D SKU, and the non-X3D 16-core SKU are pointless.
So the lineup could have been simplified to:
9600, 9600X, 9700, 9800X, 9900, 9950X
(with the X implying V-Cache)
If you remove it many customers would go:
"11800X? when is the 3D Version coming out?"
I think it would be a poor choice to give that name up.
Not releasing any other x3D cpu's, also increased the scope of sales towards the 9800x3D.
All in all for everyone looking for raw performance for gaming, i guess that was a catalyst for 9800x3D sales boom vs any other zen5 cpu's.
Regardless, it wasn't my main point, it was about simplifying the line-up.
AMD know this - so rushing out a half-baked launch is extra dumb and 100% on them.
If someone has a AM4 computer, they can just buy a 5700X/3D on AliExpress, the same way they would buy a 7400/7500F, and call it a day
Then consider AM5 if the next generation provides a noticeable uplift, if not, just wait to AM6
very good for AMD, 9800x3d It is the processor with the highest profit margins!!!
The it's Unobtaintium. It's cheaper to buy a Threadripper or Xeon from some retailers. Just unreal.