Ryzen 5 5500: Bargain Chase in a High-Stakes Tech Game

The Ryzen 5 5500 processor occupies the fifth spot in the list of best-selling CPUs on U.S. Amazon, prompting TechSpot authors to revisit their old testing to understand what this processor can deliver by the end of 2025. It initially hit the market with a price of over $150 but was not highly recommended back then. Now priced at $75, it is the cheapest widely sold CPU for the AM4 socket. Additionally, there is the Ryzen 5 3600, though it is not as readily available anymore.

Ryzen 5 5500
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Examining the Ryzen 5 5500 for gaming, it is not the best CPU in terms of absolute performance. It noticeably lags behind the Ryzen 5 7500F, but one must remember that the older CPU runs with DDR4 memory, while the newer one utilizes DDR5, which also impacts results. However, the Ryzen 5 5500 delivers exactly the same performance as the twice as expensive Core i5-12400F, provided the latter also runs with DDR4.

Ryzen 5 5500
Photo TechSpot
Ryzen 5 5500
Photo TechSpot

The Ryzen 5 5500 is catastrophically insufficient for the GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, but realistically, one is unlikely to build such a combination. Moreover, absolute performance, even with such a graphics card, remains very high and more than adequate for comfortable gaming. In terms of application performance, the Ryzen 5 5500 lags behind. It only has six relatively old cores, a low frequency, and only 16 MB of cache, as it is a mobile chip adapted to a desktop format.

Ryzen 5 5500
Photo TechSpot

Authors note that today, with the processor priced at $75 and supporting DDR4, which is significantly cheaper than DDR5, it is an excellent choice for creating a basic or even mid-tier gaming PC. A quick calculation shows that building a platform on the Ryzen 5 5500 will cost $330, while on the Ryzen 5 7500F – $580.

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