Cores
4
Threads
4
Boost
4.0 GHz
L3 cache
4 MB
TDP
65W
Socket
Socket AM4
Performance breakdown
Gaming4
Productivity4
Single-core4
Multi-core17
Power efficiency4
Lab scores
Performance score4
Cores4
Threads4
Boost clock (GHz)4.0 GHz
Estimated gaming FPS
Paired with a high-end GPU. CPU impact is largest at 1080p.
1080p9 fps
1440p7 fps
4K5 fps
Full specifications
Processor & cores
- Architecture
- Zen+
- Process node
- 12 nm
- Socket
- Socket AM4
- Release year
- 2019
- Total cores
- 4
- Threads
- 4
- Integrated graphics
- AMD Radeon Vega 8
Clocks & cache
- Base clock
- 3.6 GHz
- Boost clock
- 4.0 GHz
- Multiplier
- 36
- L1 cache
- 384 KB
- L2 cache
- 2 MB
- L3 cache
- 4 MB
Memory & platform
- Memory support
- DDR4-2933
- Max capacity
- 64 GB
- Channels
- 2
- Max bandwidth
- 46.933 GB/s
- Base power (TDP)
- 65W
- PCIe
- PCIe 3.0
Technologies
- Extensions
- AES-NI, AVX, AMD-V
Community Feedback
What Owners Say
Owners like it for cheap basic builds that boot fast and handle office work without fuss. The usual gripe is the integrated graphics feel weak for anything beyond light gaming or video.
Pros
- Starts fast with its integrated graphics
- Sips power, stays whisper quiet
- Plays light games without a card
- Handles office work without lag
Cons
- No PCIe 4.0 support
- Integrated graphics are weak
- Single-threaded performance falls behind
Verdict
Our verdict on the Ryzen 3 PRO 3200G
A Zen+ APU with decent integrated graphics, but limited to four threads and a short upgrade path.
Get it if you need a cheap office or home PC that can handle web browsing and light games without a separate graphics card. Skip it if you want to play modern games or do heavy video editing, as its older Zen+ cores and low thread count will hold you back.
Buy it if…
- You need basic office work without a graphics card.
- You're building a cheap home server or NAS on a budget.
- You want an AM4 CPU for a simple, low-cost upgrade.
Leaderboard
Its place in the overall top
3.9
13 votes
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