AMD today announced the Ryzen 7 9850X3D at CES 2026. This is a higher binned version of the company’s popular 9800X3D gaming CPU, and can hit higher clock speeds. This part has been rumored heavily in the past several weeks, and appeared in several leaks, including ones from Dell and AMD itself.

The Ryzen 7 9850X3D features the same 8-core, 16-threads design as the 9800X3D, as well as the same 96MB L3 cache that makes these chips especially suited for gaming workloads. Thanks to the higher level of binning, the 9850X3D can now hit 5.6GHz clock speeds, up from the 9800X3D’s 5.2GHz, at the same 120W TDP.

This is an almost 8% increase in clock speed, and should make the 9850X3D the fastest gaming CPU in AMD’s lineup, and consequently, on the market. Technically, the company’s 16-core 9950X3D can hit 5.7GHz, but it does so on the CCD that does not have the extra L3 cache on it, while the 3D V-cache CCD hovers around 5.5GHz. As a result, the new 9850X3D should be able to match or exceed the 9950X3D in frequency-bound scenarios.

As for what kind of gains you can expect from this chip, the answer is ‘not much’. AMD’s own numbers put the improvement in gaming performance between 3-6%, depending on the title. As for productivity performance, the answer is somewhere around 5%. There may be higher headroom to explore with overclocking, considering this is a higher binned part, but even then one probably shouldn’t expect miracles.

AMD is yet to announce the pricing for the 9850X3D, and it remains to be seen how it compares against the $480 9800X3D. Considering the existence of the $600 9900X3D and the $700 9950X3D, the pricing of the 9850X3D will likely be somewhere within the $500-$600 ballpark, as anything higher wouldn’t make sense, even within AMD’s own lineup. The company has also stated that the 9800X3D will not be discontinued, and should remain at the current pricing.