Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Processor lithography | 14 nm Best: HP AMD EPYC 7702 Processor lithography: 7 nm | |||
Number of cores | 2 Best: Intel Xeon Phi Coprocessor 7290 Number of cores: 72 | |||
Clock speed | 3.2 GHz Best: AMD FX 9590 Clock speed: 4.7 GHz | |||
Max turbo speed | 3.2 GHz Best: Cisco Intel Xeon E5-2609 Max turbo speed: 24 GHz |
Processor socket | AM4 |
---|---|
Component for | PC |
Operating modes |
|
On-board graphics adapter | yes |
---|---|
Type | AMD Radeon Vega 3 |
On-board graphics adapter base frequency | 1000.0 MHz |
Cooler included | yes |
---|---|
Thermal specification | 221.0 °F |
Clock speed | 3.2 GHz |
---|---|
Max turbo speed | 3.2 GHz |
Number of cores | 2 |
Number of threads | 4 |
Thermal Design Power (TDP) | 35.0 W |
Processor lithography | 0.0 in |
Cache | 4 MB |
---|---|
Cache type | L3 |
Memory clock speeds supported by processor | 2667.0 MHz |
Memory types supported by processor | DDR4 SDRAM |
Memory channels | Dual |
AMD is bringing back their Athlon brand with the Athlon 200GE, featuring two cores and four threads. With a price of only $60 for the reviewed processor, this is the cheapest option to join the Ryzen+Vega game and a clear winner when it comes to price/performance.
AMD is breathing life back into an almost 20-year-old brand with the Athlon 200GE processor armed with Radeon Vega 3 graphics.
If you're building a PC on a very, very tight budget, AMD's Athlon 200GE is a cost-effective, good-value choice among cheap desktop CPUs.
If you are in the market for a very simple processor that will cover all your browsing or media center needs, hey AMD might just have the perfect value proc available. The Athlon series is back, join ... Introduction
AMD's most affordable Zen based processor yet, the Athlon 200GE is just dual-core, but before your shrek louder than the coil whine of a cheap graphics card,...
Athlon 200GE You can't build a PC for under a thousand monies, you can't game at anything less than 4K, you can't... the list goes on, I've heard it all. Then you've got AMD coming in with a CPU that costs a penny less than £40. That's right, a far cry from the super expensive monsters we typically review. You can build a PC for very little money, albeit it won't be a particularly fast one, but that doesn't mean it's worthless. For working at home or in the office, browsing the web, and who knows, maybe some gaming, this
Core i5 3475S
Core i9 Extreme Edition 10980XE X-series
Xeon E5-4607
Core i5 2400S
Xeon E5-2470v2
Pentium G4620