AMD Ryzen 3 2200G Processor With Vega Review
Peter Donnell / 7 years ago
Synthetic Benchmarks With Dedicated GPU
3DMark Firestrike
The 2200G gets off to a good start, performing just behind the 1300X, but beating out the Ryzen 3 1200 by a considerable margin. However, overclocking showed it beating the 1300X with ease, showing some improvement to the CPU cores themselves.
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Overclocked
Unigine Superposition 1080p Extreme
This test focuses mostly on PCIe throughput than it does the CPU. However, the 2200G has no issues putting out a score that is comparable with anything else. At stock and overclocked ratios, it’s easily capable of letting out 1080 Ti do its job without throttling, so that should be true for any GPU you may use.
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Overclocked
PCMark 10 Express
The Ryzen 2400G is a budget CPU at its heart, so its no surprise it’s low down on the charts here with 4 cores and 4 threads. However, it’s not all doom and gloom, as it’s going up against many other more powerful and more expensive CPUs. This is still a high score, and again it bests the 1300X once overclocked!
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Overclocked
WPrime 32M and 1024M
The same holds true for WPrime, it’s far from fastest, but still beating out the 1200 and 1300X by a considerable margin despite its slightly lower price tag.
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Overclocked
Cinebench R15
A rendering chip this is not, but as we’ve already seen, it’s still pulling ahead of the 1200 and 1300X, so it’s quickly competing with the other Ryzen 3 ranges.
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Overclocked
Handbrake MP4 to MKV Conversion 4K
I wouldn’t buy this CPU if planning to do a massive amount of rendering. However, it hit a respectable 25.6 FPS and 28.5 FPS, which is great for a £100-ish quad-core, especially on a 4K render.
Stock
Overclocked