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If you follow PC hardware chatter, you have felt the hum building: multiple reports and industry leaks suggest AMD is preparing to expand its famous X3D family, and this time the focus looks squarely aimed at value-minded gamers on the AM5 platform. Without repeating every rumor as fact, here is a level-headed FAQ on what is reportedly coming, why it matters, and how to be ready.

Budget Gamers, Something Big Is Coming to AM5: What You Should Know

What exactly is being reported?

Outlets including Tom’s Hardware and VideoCardz have covered signs of a new eight-core Zen 4 processor with 3D V-Cache positioned below the beloved Ryzen 7 7800X3D in AMD’s stack. The reported recipe: the same 96MB of stacked L3 cache that makes X3D chips special, with modestly lower clocks, aimed at making cache-accelerated gaming more affordable. AMD has a history of exactly this kind of move, and the timing chatter suggests the wait will not be long.

Why would a cheaper X3D chip be a big deal?

Because 3D V-Cache is the single most effective gaming feature in modern CPUs, and it has always carried a premium. The X3D chips you can buy today are superb but start around the mid-$300s, like the Ryzen 7 7800X3D at roughly $340 on Newegg. A more attainable doorway into stacked-cache gaming could reshape every budget build guide overnight, especially since games care far more about that cache than about the last few hundred megahertz of clock speed.

How does today’s lineup look while we wait?

AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D retail box
The 7800X3D anchors the value end of today’s X3D lineup.

Two eight-core X3D options currently serve AM5 gamers: the Zen 4 based 7800X3D and the flagship Zen 5 based Ryzen 7 9800X3D. Both deliver chart-topping gaming performance; the open question is simply how much more accessible the entry point is about to become.

Should I buy now or wait?

If your PC works and you enjoy your games, waiting a beat costs nothing and the picture should clarify very soon. If you need a CPU today, nothing that launches next will make a 7800X3D or 9800X3D purchase regrettable; they remain the benchmark leaders. The classic advice applies: buy when you need it, not when the internet tells you to.

What should budget builders do to prepare?

PC builder assembling an affordable gaming rig

Everything except the CPU can be assembled today. A capable AM5 board like the GIGABYTE B650M Gaming Plus WiFi ($107.00 on Newegg), a DDR5-6000 kit, and a quality power supply form a launch-ready foundation. Update the board BIOS via flashback and you will be first in line whenever new silicon appears.

GIGABYTE B650M Gaming Plus WiFi motherboard
A $107 B650M board is all the platform a value X3D build needs.

Where will news land first?

Keep an eye on AMD’s official channels and Newegg’s AMD Ryzen CPU listings, where new processors appear the moment they go live. We will have coverage and buying advice here on Newegg Insider as soon as there is something concrete to share.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the reported new AMD X3D CPU.

Is AMD releasing a new X3D CPU?
Multiple credible reports point to a new budget-oriented eight-core X3D processor for AM5 arriving soon, though details remain unofficial until AMD announces.
Should I wait or buy a 7800X3D now?
If you can wait a short while, the picture should clarify soon. If you need a CPU today, the 7800X3D and 9800X3D remain outstanding buys.
Will a new X3D CPU work in existing AM5 motherboards?
Yes. AM5 boards from B650 up support new Ryzen chips, typically after a BIOS update.
What makes X3D chips special for gaming?
3D V-Cache stacks 96MB of L3 cache on the die, dramatically reducing memory latency, which is why X3D chips lead nearly every gaming benchmark.