AMD is no longer good? Entry-level Zen2 loses ground and loses to Pentium

[Gearbest News]Since the release of AMD’s new Zen3 architecture, AMD has truly made players say YES in terms of cost performance and performance! But when it comes to the new Zen2 Athlon 4150GE, which has attracted a lot of attention some time ago, I can only sigh, it’s still the same formula, and it’s still the same taste.

AMD Athlon 4150GE (picture from the Internet)
AMD Athlon 4150GE (picture from the Internet)

By summarizing the exposure information and comparing it with the GeekBench5 benchmark database, it is not difficult to see that the Athlon 4150GE will use a 7nm process, Zen2 CPU architecture, VegaGPU architecture, 4 cores and 4 threads, a frequency of 3.3-3.8GHz, a 4MB L2 cache, and a 4MB L3 cache. It will be equipped with an 8GB DDR4-3000, integrated Vega5 GPU, and 320 stream processors.

Judging from the parameters alone, although these improvements are very significant compared to the previous generation Athlon entry-level flagship products with 12nm Zen+CPU and Vega3 GPU.

But judging from the running scores of Athlon 4150GE:

The Athlon 4150GE single-core running score is 1098, which is not as good as the Pentium G7400 in the 12th generation Core, lagging behind by a full 25%, and even lower than the i3-12100 by nearly 40%.

The multi-core score is 3728, which is about 15% ahead of the Pentium G7400 with 2 cores and 4 threads, but 45% weaker than the i3-12100 with 4 cores and 8 threads.

In terms of power consumption, the Pentium G7400 is 45W and the i3-12100 is 60W. The thermal design power consumption of Athlon 4150GE is 35W.

Of course, as the PRO version, Athlon 4150GE is only for OEM channels and not retail.

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