Amd AMD Ryzen 7 7700
CPUs

Amd

AMD Ryzen 7 7700: What Real Users Actually Think

Mar 2026

Last Analyzed

7/10

Overall Rating

28

Positive Reviews

14

Negative Reviews

Summary

The AMD Ryzen 7 7700 is a well-regarded mid-range CPU that has carved out a solid niche among budget-conscious builders on the AM5 platform. Reddit sentiment is generally positive, with users praising it as a capable chip for both gaming and light productivity work. The consensus is that it's a strong value pick when priced competitively, particularly for those who want 8 cores without paying the X-series premium. It's frequently recommended for 1440p gaming builds paired with mid-to-high-end GPUs, and users consistently report smooth performance in demanding titles. The main debate isn't whether it's good — it clearly is — but whether the 7600/7500F offer better value for pure gaming, or whether the 7800X3D is worth the extra spend.

Pros

  • Solid 1440p gaming performance — users pairing it with GPUs like the 4070 Super and 9070 report zero bottlenecks and 100+ FPS in demanding AAA titles
  • 8-core, 16-thread configuration gives a meaningful edge over 6-core alternatives in streaming, video encoding, and multi-threaded workloads
  • Comes with a stock cooler unlike the X variants, saving $20-30 on the build
  • Unlocked multiplier allows PBO tuning to essentially match 7700X performance at a lower price — users report hitting 5GHz all-core at around 60W with proper settings
  • AM5 platform longevity gives a clear upgrade path to future X3D chips on the same motherboard
  • Available cheaply as OEM tray CPUs on AliExpress (around $150-170 USD), making it one of the most affordable 8-core AM5 options globally

Cons

  • The 7600 and 7500F offer near-identical gaming performance for $50-100 less, making the 7700 a harder sell for pure gamers
  • 7800X3D trades blows at only $50-80 more and consistently outperforms it in gaming — many users consider it the real sweet spot on AM5
  • 7000-series chips idle hot (40-55°C) even with quality aftermarket coolers like the Deepcool AK400, which surprises first-time AM5 buyers
  • AMD's TDP rating of 65W is misleading — actual power draw under load is closer to 89W PPT, which frustrated users looking for a genuinely efficient chip
  • No iGPU on the non-X variant limits troubleshooting options without a discrete GPU installed
  • The 9600X (Zen 5) offers comparable gaming performance with better efficiency, giving buyers a reason to skip it entirely on a new build

Does the 7700 Actually Run Hot or Is Reddit Overreacting?

A recurring complaint across multiple threads is that the Ryzen 7 7700 idles higher than expected — 40-55°C with mid-range coolers. Users confirm this is normal behavior for the Zen 4 architecture, not a defect. The chip performs fine thermally under load, but the idle temps catch first-time AM5 builders off guard.

8 Cores for the Price of 6: The 7700's Streaming Advantage

For users who game and stream simultaneously, the 7700 is the clear recommendation over the 7600 or 9600X. The two extra cores make a tangible difference in OBS encoding performance, and at near-parity pricing on the grey market, it becomes an easy choice for content creators on a budget.

PBO Unlocks the 7700's Hidden Potential

Multiple users report tuning their 7700 with PBO and Curve Optimizer to achieve 7700X-level performance — one user documented hitting 5GHz all-core at 60W with temps staying under 75°C. The non-X chip's unlocked multiplier turns it into a sleeper overclocker that punches above its price point.

User Reviews (42 of 223 analyzed)

109
0
BeerGogglesFTWr/Amd23d agonegative

When I was shopping for AM5 system parts, 7700X got all the good bundle prices. Never saw a 7700 in a bundle, so it was always more expensive to buy. I would have been just as happy with either. I just wanted the better price, so I went with the 7700X.

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51
0
CumAssaultr/hardware23d agonegative

My biggest complaint about all these new CPUs from AMD is that AMD needs to stop lying about TDP. It is an absolute joke that their TDP formula doesn't actually use power at all. Their '65W' CPUs actually draw around 89W.

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36
0
Kyrondr/hardware23d agonegative

TDP should be power consumption, but companies want to compare AMD TDP to Intel TDP, so they are both locked in this stupidity.

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32
0
TheDuo2Corer/Amd23d agopositive

Bought one on aliexpress for 170 USD instead. OEM cpus for the chinese market. All you get is the cpu in a plastic tray and no warranty from amd but they rarely fail anyways.

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21
0
Specific_Eggplant562r/buildapc23d agopositive

Both are great choice for 1440p, both are great cpus. Take 7700 if it's cheaper or take 9600x if it's cheaper.

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19
0
alman12345r/Amd23d agonegative

The 7800x3d still hovers around $300 on Aliexpress so this CPU isn't that much of a steal at $247.

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18
0
VersaceUpholsteryr/buildapc23d agonegative

Yes, even a 7600 / 7500f is fine. You can get 7700 gaming performance with those CPUs with PBO enabled. Most people don't need 7800x3d, but still buy.

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18
0
nick12233r/buildapc23d agopositive

7700 has my vote. Based on hardware unboxed reviews of 7700x, 7700 and 9600x they perform almost the same in gaming on average. 7700x is fastest at around 4% faster than 7700 and 3% faster than 9600x. Where 7700 has a decent advantage is in productivity workloads.

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17
0
imsolowdownr/hardware23d agonegative

A 65W intel chip actually consumes 65W once PL2 kicks in. AMD chips will never consume their rated TDP in the same situation.

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14
0
theSkareqror/buildapc23d agonegative

If it's for gaming, don't waste money on it. 7600/7500f like the other poster suggested is a better value. These performs the same as 7700x for gaming unless the games you play are RTS like Satisfactory or really heavily CPU bound like WoW. Either these two or 7800x3d.

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12
0
dirthurtsr/Amd23d agopositive

These are definitely the new go to affordable build chips.

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8
0
aragorn18r/buildapc23d agonegative

It's a totally fine CPU. But for pure gaming, the two extra cores of the 7700 won't really benefit you over the 7600. You could save about $100 and go with the 7600 or 9600.

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8
0
Archimedleyr/Amd23d agonegative

That made no sense when you can get a 7800x3d for not much more.

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8
0
ShadowsGuardianr/buildapc23d agopositive

Get the octa core 7700. It will help you in productivity and games that make use of the extra cores.

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7
0
Tof12345r/buildapc23d agopositive

The 7700 is the next best thing for gaming, other than the 79/7800x3d. It's a fantastic gaming chip which can deliver amazing productivity performance too.

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7
0
t90fanr/buildapc23d agopositive

Yes, any AM5 CPU is competitive.

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7
0
bananabanana9876r/buildapc23d agonegative

9600x. It's more efficient and less hot.

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6
0
crooneu35r/buildapc23d agopositive

I game on a 5700x with a 4070 super at 1440p. OP will definitely be fine with the 7700.

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6
0
steaksoldierr/buildapc23d agonegative

100% go for the 7500f OP. Then in 5 or so years get the latest X3D to replace it. Clear upgrade path for the future and you get a great cpu now for cheap.

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5
0
FIVEGRAVESr/buildapc23d agopositive

Wanna game only? 9600X. Wanna game and stream and maybe de/encode videos? 7700/X. They both have kinda same fps - in some games 9600x some more, in other games 7700/X some more. I personally would grab the 7700 as I'm a streamer and need the additional cores for heavy multitasking.

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5
0
ugaarter/ryzen23d agonegative

The reason the temps are higher on the 7700 is most likely because they are using the stock cooler. X cpus don't come with a cooler so you need an aftermarket one.

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4
0
Gloomy_Summer1003r/PcBuildHelp23d agopositive

7700X is regularly equal or better than the 5800X3D — it will be perfectly fine for gaming. I had a 5600(non X) with 6950xt and it was fine with Helldivers 2, still +100fps 1440p medium-high settings.

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3
0
sinnisanasr/ryzen23d agopositive

For 100 less the 7700 is a no brainer. In my country the 7700 was 80€ cheaper than the 7700x and i went for it. You are losing 3-5% compared to the 7700x and you get a more efficient cpu. Also you can overclock it and you basically have a 7700x for 100$ less.

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3
0
AngelPhantoxr/ryzen23d agopositive

I recently built a system with Ryzen 7 7700 non x and with 32gb 6000mt/s cl30 ram. From personal perspective if you go with either of them get yourself a bigger cooler than the TDP suggests on spec list. Since it's not representative. At the moment I'm using deepcool ak400 digital white, I'm getting idle 48-53c and at load 65-80c.

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3
0
0wlGodr/ryzen23d agopositive

It's the same cpu as the 7700x... 50/100 mhz more for 7700x and 142w power limit. You can unlock limits and do +200 for 7700 like 7700x. Statistically 7700x probably has better silicon but it depends.

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3
0
OldManGrimmr/ryzen23d agopositive

If you're only in the 70s while gaming, that's very good. The 7000 series chips run a little hot, I wouldn't worry about it at all.

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3
0
mrbubblesnatcherr/PcBuildHelp23d agonegative

Looking at the build I'd do a 7600(x) + 7900gre for the same cost for a better 1440p performance balance. The 7700x is more of a productivity CPU. For gaming the 7600(x) is close enough in performance making the extra cost not worth it.

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3
0
mitchumzr/buildapc23d agopositive

Considering the price points I'm seeing (7500F $200CAD, 7600 $260CAD, and 7700 $245CAD) I think the 7700 will be right for me. I don't mind spending what's basically two takeout meals more for the extra juice.

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2
0
Withinmyranger/buildapc23d agopositive

Honestly, any AM5 cpu is good enough, I'd even say great. You go with a higher tier if you really need more cores or you go x3d for gaming. For instance, 7500f/7600/7600x/7700/9600x are all roughly the same performance.

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2
0
urbanman2004r/buildapc23d agopositive

With the 7700 containing 8-cores compared to the 9600X's 6-cores, I would pick the 7700 every time especially since they can be had for cheap on AliExpress for around $150 USD.

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2
0
Drenkzr/buildapc23d agopositive

If you plan to only game on your pc, the 9600x is slightly better (it has slightly better single core performance). If you plan to do anything creative that demands multi cores then the 7700 is a no brainer.

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1
0
IceBeam92r/hardware23d agopositive

It's pretty close to its X counterpart in gaming. It's important to note these numbers are obtained with a 4090 most powerful gpu one can have. Most people won't have any difference at all. For gaming 7600 is better price-performance.

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1
0
Otres911r/ryzen23d agopositive

They are basically the same cpu, get the cheaper one. Enable PBO and it's 7700x and can oc even more if you want but will need proper cooler.

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1
0
Wonderful-Nose-765r/ryzen23d agopositive

7700 can match 7700x with the right pbo settings and it's a lot cheaper.

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1
0
Danni_Elr/ryzen23d agopositive

7700 here with thermalright phantom spirit 120, pbo manual 65w config, +200 mhz, CO -30. In games it's ~62°C @ 5500 mhz, 60w power consumption. Works perfectly with ddr5 6000, CL 30.

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1
0
gupgup88r/ryzen23d agopositive

Run a pbo curve -30 and platform thermal limit of 85deg if you're worried. Set in the bios. Do run some stress tests after setting the pbo.

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1
0
Mediocre_Current_362r/buildapc23d agopositive

Build a system with 7700 and rtx 3080 for me and 9600x and rtx 3060 for my friend. Differences are marginal in some game but for the unoptimized mess that is tarkov the 9600x is a bit better while the 7700 stutters less. I undervolted mine and now it doesn't hit more than 75°C.

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1
0
denixenr/PcBuildHelp23d agopositive

I own the non-x 7700 and it is a monster. You'll be fine with the x variant.

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1
0
Own-Log-2964r/PcBuildHelp23d agopositive

I have a 7700X paired with a 3070Ti. Breezes through everything I need it to do.

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1
0
Rissay_mnr/ryzen23d agonegative

I'm getting higher temps on my non-x than my friend in idle even though I'm using an AG620 and MX-6. My friend has the X version and uses the peerless assassin 120 SE. He gets 34c in idle while I idle 40-55c.

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1
0
Bac0nPlaner/ryzen23d agopositive

My r7 7700x idles around 38-40 in windows. Average around 60-70 while gaming and constant 90-95 during cinebench. Anything under 95 should be fine. Any time I get it close to 100% utilization it goes towards 95 but never over and doesn't seem to be thermal throttling either. It's just how these cpus are designed.

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1
0
Entiramaxr/Amd23d agopositive

I bought 7700 on aliexpress 3 months ago for 160$ and it works fine.

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