- Graphic card
- AMD Ryzen 5 5600G 6-Core 12-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor with Radeon Graphics
AMD Ryzen 5 5600G 6-Core 12-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor with Radeon Graphics
Regular price
$402.84
Availability:
In Stock
SKU: E-22645
Category: Graphic card, New Arrivals, Featured Product
Shipping : Free (USA only)
Estimated Delivery : September 29 - October 05
- Features best-in-class graphics performance in a desktop processor for smooth 1080p gaming, no graphics card required
- 6 Cores and 12 processing threads, bundled with the AMD Wraith Stealth cooler
- 4.4 GHz Max Boost, unlocked for overclocking, 19 MB cache, DDR4-3200 support
- For the advanced Socket AM4 platform
Product Attributes:
Attribute Name | Attribute Value |
---|---|
Processor | 4.4 GHz amd_ryzen_5_5600g |
Availability | In Stock |
Rating | 5 stars |
Ratings & Reviews
Reviewed on September 12, 2022
Got this when I was building a new PC to replace a five-year-old Ryzen 7 1700X system. The old PC was great performance-wise, I didn't really need to upgrade yet but I was beginning to have crashes periodically ever since moving to dual monitors in late 2020 due to working from home. These were the strangest crashes...no error, no warning, the system would just reboot. It was really annoying, even though with NVMe drives the reboot is quick. It was a mystery whether the problem was caused by the GPU, CPU, memory, the SSD, a driver somewhere, or some combination of all of the above. I figured it was time to pull my system into the modern age with updated interfaces, chip, and motherboard. With GPUs still being ridiculously overpriced, I targeted the Ryzen 7 5700G as a chip that would give me comparable or better performance than my old system but still give me a more modern technology set without needing a GPU. The old PC had an nVidia 1060 but I'd had good luck with its predecessor when I'd run for five years with an AMD A10 APU chip that played games sufficiently well and absolutely manhandled Windows and office apps. But as luck would have it, the 5700G had been dropping in price during my research phase, and right when I went to buy, the price spiked up. Thanks a lot, irrational market! Pondering what to do, I read some comparisons of the 1700X to the 5600G, and the 5600G fared ok. It was close in overall performance and much more efficient and used less power. It did have two fewer cores, but I'm not a streamer or heavy video editor, so I figured I'd give it a crack. Amazon had a third party seller that shipped out of Mexico with the best price...I was a little weirded out by that, but the seller came through and the chip is legit and arrived brand new in box with stock cooler, instructions, and foil badge sticker. You should pair this APU with a good mobo and memory. I chose the MSI B550 MPG Gamer Edge WiFi, and TeamGroup DDR4 3600. The mobo will be critical in determining your possible upgrade paths, and the memory is used by the AMD APUs to help with the graphics. The MSI board will support eventually moving to the 5700G or even 5800 or higher with a GPU. The 5600G installed easily and worked great on first boot. The MSI board supports the 5600G with BIOS version 17 and above and mine came with version 18 installed. So far the system has been stable with none of the weird crashes. I've not pushed the gaming performance yet, just a couple low-demand games. The most visually demanding was Lara Croft and the Temple of Osiris...it was sluggish at 4K but fine at 1080 FHD. I'm also running several browser tabs open. The 5600G cost at about $100 less than the what the 5700G was running at the time. So far so good, and I know there are some easy APU/CPU upgrades available in the future but right now I've no need to do so. Update 22-Sep-2022: I am completely despondent now. After running beautifully for two weeks, the random reboots when the system is at idle are now happening to this PC just has it had on my old one. I've read every post I could from others that have had similar issues with Ryzen chips and I'm beginning to think it's a driver issue, but I'm still not 100% sure. This is a nice chip but if it's going to keep crashing I simply can't use it; it's just too maddening to walk away and return a few minutes later and the thing has rebooted. I may have to return the chip or even consider switching to Intel. What a disappointment. Update 24-Sep-2022: Back in action after doing a Windows reset. This is basically reinstalling Windows over your existing install. System is stable again. Very strange. But a few days ago when the issue started it was after I had just gone to the AMD site and installed a bunch of chipset drivers and the Radeon utilities. So I'll stick with the stock drivers Windows installed, and leave the other updates out. The only ones I've applied since getting this PC build are the motherboard BIOS (MSI B550 MPG Gamer Edge WiFi, now currently at BIOS 7C91v1B), various motherboard drivers for the WiFi and Bluetooth, and the MSI Center software so I can easily reference the mobo BIOS and driver versions from Windows. If I get past two weeks without the issue returning then I can say those AMD drivers were likely related, which is unfortunate, if those drivers also bring better performance. But the best feature is stability, so I'll stick with this for now. Also put the star rating to four stars - this is a great performing chip, but that reboot thing is a total bummer when it happens. Update 08-Dec-2022: Running GREAT. Holding back on the drivers was the answer. System is rock solid now, through games, video streaming, and many browser tabs open. Have since run Fallout 4 just fine (it struggled with my dual monitor setup at first, but I think that's a Fallout thing and not the Ryzen chip) at FHD. I regularly put the system to sleep and wake it later; no problems and I'm getting things done at work and play.
Reviewed on July 18, 2023
Easily overclocks. It can game but not at the highest setting. Only if you need to do more intensive processing like rendering videos would you need more thread capacity like with it big brother the 5700G. For everyday use and light gaming this 5600G excels. Probably why its pricing is stable and not dropping much lately. Get one of the many mature and stable motherboards that handles its onboard CPU graphics and you can scratch off the expense of getting a graphics card. Pair it with two sticks for a total of 32gigs of memory (2x16) and you will be off to the races.
Reviewed on July 10, 2023
This product really surprised me because I was not expecting it to do everything it promised. I was expecting to be able to play small games like Minecraft or Roblox but then to struggle on anything more, but that was not the case. This product is great for gaming, and although you could use a GPU with it, it doesn't really need one unless you are trying to make your games look like a movie. Some of the games i know it can play are, - Halo - War tunder (almost max graphics too) - Race Room - fallout - and more These are games i tested with this CPU (without a GPU) and it runs all of these games fine
Reviewed on July 24, 2023
The Ryzen 5 5600G processor is great for a mid ranged build for running as a workstation or adding in a gpu like the GTX 1660 Super, RX 6600, or RTX 2060 for 1080P gaming. It can be paired with a better gpus but your budget starts to get pricey. The performance is slighly better than the Ryzen 5 5500 but you get the integrated Vega graphics which you can play eSports titles on low settings.
Reviewed on June 16, 2023
I replaced a 3600 AMD cpu with this for the express purpose of removing the video card and reducing the power consumption. After making sure to update the bios on the motherboard I put the chip in and removed the RX480 video card. I have loaded and played many of the older games in my library, like Borderlands, and they run very well. This system uses about 140 watts less power than my full tower gaming setup. I also switched to a 24" gaming monitor from a 32" screen that I now use for streaming. I am happy with the results. The AMD Ryzen 5 5600G is great pick for a budget system.
Reviewed on July 04, 2023
The processor and the fan work properly. The box arrived with just some little damage on its vertexes due it was protected just into a plastic bag but the warranty seals were undamaged. For a free shipping cost and personal use this is not a considerable issue because the original box has enough shock protection inside; but if you plan to resell it on box you should invest a little more on shipping. I recomend the product
Reviewed on July 02, 2023
Ensure you have at least 32gb of ram, or higher. The more ram the more will go to your GPU. I have 32 and it dedicates 9gb to the gpu. I can play red dead 2 well. my only issue is the controls for the GPU are hard ot find with no instructions. I had to guess until i got it right. Go to AMD. But other then, its ten times better then I thought and the CPU runs as well as my 5800X. And it came fast
Reviewed on June 06, 2023
It's a bulk CPU, so only people who understand it will buy it. it's a CPU with GPU(Radeon) capability. As for performance, it can be used comfortably for light usage such as working with Microsoft Office and playing back 4K videos on YouTube. The CPU generates a moderate amount of heat, and a retail CPU fan is sufficient. There are symptoms of what appears to be a Windows 11/10 driver issue. When Windows 11 is cleanly installed, there is video output, but when the Radeon driver is automatically applied after installation, dual monitor output is no longer available. Using Windows Remote Desktop to remove the graphics driver will restore monitor output to normal. However, since the driver is automatically applied optimally, the monitor output will be problematic again. I have no choice but to install Ubuntu Desktop and use Windows 11 virtualized.
Related products (4/210)