Early Ryzen 7 9850X3D leaks look flashy in FPS screenshots, but once you slow down, it feels like a sideways step until AMD fixes things in BIOS.
Why do people already have the chip
Why do people already have the chip
- AMD has not officially launched it yet
- The Ryzen 7 9850X3D goes on sale January 29 for $499
- Some buyers grabbed it early through resellers
- One Reddit user paid $570 just to start testing early
- Testing was done on an MSI board
- BIOS was from December 2025
- That BIOS adds compatibility but not full tuning
- EXPO was enabled, no heavy tweaking
- One user ran Cinebench 2026
- Single-thread score landed at 568
- That is identical to the Ryzen 7 9800X3D
- In other words, no real uplift yet
- Boost clocks alone do not guarantee wins
- Early BIOS builds rarely extract full performance
- AMD and board vendors usually tune late
- Launch-day BIOS often changes the story
- Another user could not hit 5.7 GHz on all cores
- This was on an MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi
- BIOS used AGESA PI pre-1.3.0.0
- That version supports the chip, but stability is not locked in
- Pre-release AGESA often limits behavior
- All-core boost is especially sensitive
- One outlier reportedly hit 5.75 GHz
- No tuning details were shared, so context is missing
- Counter-Strike 2 testing was done
- GPU used was the Counter-Strike 2, paired with an RTX 5090
- Average FPS crossed 900
- That sounds insane, but it is not new
- Ryzen 7 9800X3D can do this
- Ryzen 7 7800X3D can do this
- The game is already CPU-light at that level
- GPU and engine limits take over
- New BIOS updates are coming
- Final AGESA versions matter more than clocks
- Stability tuning can unlock real gains
- Early benchmarks are basically placeholders
- Right now, the 9850X3D behaves like a 9800X3D
- No clear uplift yet
- No clear regression either
- BIOS maturity will decide everything
- Review the embargo lift
- Retail BIOS releases
- Wider game testing
- Then we will know if this is a real upgrade or just a refresh