Cores
4
Threads
4
Boost
3.8 GHz
L3 cache
4 MB
TDP
35W
Socket
AM4
Performance breakdown
Gaming4
Productivity4
Single-core4
Multi-core17
Power efficiency4
Lab scores
Performance score4
Cores4
Threads4
Boost clock (GHz)3.8 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
Clocks & cache
- Base clock
- 3.3 GHz
- Boost clock
- 3.8 GHz
- Multiplier
- 33
- 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)
- 35W
- Max temperature
- 95°C
- PCIe
- PCIe 3.0
Technologies
- Extensions
- AES-NI, AVX, AMD-V
Community Feedback
What Owners Say
Folks love this chip for sipping power in a basic office build while staying dead quiet. The main grumble is that it feels sluggish with anything beyond light multitasking.
Pros
- Stays cool in small cases
- Sips power on cheap PSUs
- Boots office PCs in seconds
- Handles light gaming just fine
Cons
- Only four processing cores
- Old Picasso architecture
- Integrated graphics too weak for gaming
Verdict
Our verdict on the Ryzen 3 PRO 3200GE
This is a low-power quad-core office chip for basic tasks, limited by its older Zen+ architecture and integrated graphics.
Get it if you need a cheap office PC that sips power and handles basic multitasking without a fuss. Skip it if you want any gaming or heavy workload performance—this chip is strictly for light duty.
Buy it if…
- You are building a basic office PC that needs to stay cool and quiet.
- You need a cheap upgrade for an older AM4 motherboard.
- You want a low-power home server for file sharing or light media.
Leaderboard
Its place in the overall top
3.8
14 votes
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