AMD Ryzen 5 2400G Processor With Vega Review
Peter Donnell / 7 years ago
Synthetic Benchmarks With Dedicated GPU
3DMark Firestrike
Using our 1080 Ti and disabling the GPU cores on the CPU, we can really test how well those four CPU cores perform on their own. As you can see, the 2400G rockets ahead of quite a few Ryzen c, 5, and 7 CPUs, scoring 17019. That’s a solid score and it’s ahead of the Ryzen 1400 which it is set to replace.
Stock
Overclocked
Unigine Superposition 1080p Extreme
No signs of throttling for our GPU, which is impressive as the chip only support PCIe 8x, which clearly isn’t a big issue at all.
Stock
Overclocked
PCMark 10 Express
Multitasking is pretty solid, and while it looks a bit lack lustre at stock, it boosted to 4786 once overclocked, so it’s definately worth exploring the free performance boost.
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Overclocked
WPrime 32M and 1024M
A big number cruncher this is not, however, it’s great to see it beating out the 1300X, by a nice margin.
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Overclocked
Cinebench R15
Again, this isn’t a rendering CPU, so it’s no surprise to see it low down on the charts, but it’s not a task it was designed to do.
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Overclocked
Handbrake MP4 to MKV Conversion 4K
I doubt many will be converting 4K video files on a budget CPU, but once overclocked it was nearly hitting 30FPS, which is pretty darn good for such a cheap chip.
Stock
Overclocked