Tuesday, February 25th 2025

ASRock Addresses AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D Boot Issues With a BIOS Update

ASRock has deployed beta BIOS version 3.20 today for its AM5 motherboard lineup to address persistent boot failures and burns affecting AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D processors. ASRock Japan refuted claims of permanent CPU damage, characterizing circulating reports as "misinformation" and identifying memory compatibility as the underlying cause rather than processor defects. The firmware patch targets a specific interaction between memory configurations and the 9800X3D's architecture that manifests as boot failures across what ASRock describes as a "minority proportion" of affected systems. A community-aggregated database on Reddit documented 40 failure incidents, with ASRock boards accounting for 32 cases. The failure pattern appears inconsistent—some systems fail immediately while others operate normally for weeks before exhibiting symptoms. BIOS flashback procedures have successfully restored functionality in multiple instances.

"The CPUs themselves are not broken. This is specifically a memory compatibility issue affecting system initialization," ASRock Japan explained via social media. Prior to releasing version 3.20, the company had recommended affected users downgrade to BIOS 3.10 as a temporary workaround. Notably, customers who RMA'd their processors and received replacements found their systems suddenly operational—suggesting the issue stems from complex firmware-hardware interactions rather than manufacturing defects. The problem appears isolated to the 9800X3D model and does not affect other processors in AMD's Ryzen 9000 series lineup. ASRock noted that the company will provide comprehensive technical documentation explaining the underlying mechanisms. AMD has yet to issue an official statement regarding the compatibility issues affecting their premium gaming processor.
Sources: ASRock Japan on X, ASRock
Add your own comment

6 Comments on ASRock Addresses AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D Boot Issues With a BIOS Update

#2
HisDivineOrder
Looks like a lot of companies are skipping QC nowadays. Nvidia, AMD, Intel, AsRock, nobody seems to want to avoid problems in favor of selling more product for more money and let the problems maybe come later. I remember the Before Time when companies cared about their reputation enough to be sure these things didn't happen.

Them were good times. I guess they figure when people line up for weeks to spend way more than MSRP to get imaginary performance maybe if it doesn't burn out or melt cables or go defective after a year then it's all worth it because those are the kinds of people that will just buy more to replace what they didn't get right the first time.
Posted on Reply
#3
TheinsanegamerN
HisDivineOrderLooks like a lot of companies are skipping QC nowadays. Nvidia, AMD, Intel, AsRock, nobody seems to want to avoid problems in favor of selling more product for more money and let the problems maybe come later. I remember the Before Time when companies cared about their reputation enough to be sure these things didn't happen.

Them were good times. I guess they figure when people line up for weeks to spend way more than MSRP to get imaginary performance maybe if it doesn't burn out or melt cables or go defective after a year then it's all worth it because those are the kinds of people that will just buy more to replace what they didn't get right the first time.
They dont care, because consumers gotta CONSOOM, no matter the cost. Hardware failure, recalls, fires? NBD, just buy the next shiny!

Anyone who moves slower and cares about their product loses business.
Posted on Reply
#4
mb194dc
Being an early adopter makes you a beta tester in this era... Better of waiting until hardware been out a year at least.
Posted on Reply
#5
xorbe
ASRock has deployed beta BIOS version 3.20 today for its AM5 motherboard lineup
Seems like ASRock B650 Steel Legend WiFi was excluded.
Posted on Reply
#6
_roman_
B650 livemixer is also not in the list.

I doubt there is a 100% bug free AM4 or AM5 mainboard. The big brands have nearly the same quality and some issues over the years with different hardware.
Posted on Reply
Feb 26th, 2025 13:54 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts