AVX-512 Makes Ryzen 9 7950X Geekbench 5 Results Look Good — Too Good

AMD Ryzen 7000
(Image credit: AMD)

Ryzen 7000 is launching later this month, and we're starting to see benchmarks of official Ryzen 7000 chips in the wild. But with the introduction of AVX512 on Zen 4, the new Geekbench benchmarks inflate Ryzen 7000's average performance estimates over Zen 3 chips to seemingly absurd levels.

@Benchleaks on Twitter shared a new Ryzen 9 7950X Geekbench 5 score that shows very impressive gains for the Zen 4 architecture over Zen 3.

The test bench for this new Geekbench 5 result featured a 16-core Ryzen 9 7950X Zen 4 chip with a maximum reported frequency of 5.738GHz, 32GB of 6000MT/s DDR5 RAM, and an Asus ROG Crosshair X670E Extreme motherboard.

The test results show a single-core score of 2,217 points, and an eye-watering multi-core score of 24,396 points. 

For comparison, we pulled a recent Geekbench 5 benchmark of the 16-core Ryzen 9 5950X Zen 3 processor (running on a B550 Aorus Elite motherboard with 32GB of 3600MT/s DDR4 memory). The 5950X's test results show a lower single-core score of 1,725 points and a dramatically lower multi-core score of 17,069 points. Based on these results, the 7950X outperforms the 5950X by 29% in the single-core test and 43% in the multi-core test.

These scores look fantastic for the 7950X, but they don't tell us the entire story. For that, we need to look at the different workloads Geekbench 5 uses in its benchmark. Geekbench 5 splits three types of workloads across 21 benchmarks, including integer, floating point, and AVX-intensive cryptographic workloads. 

If we take a look at how both chips perform in each of these different workload categories, the story becomes clearer.

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Workload differences in Geekbench 5 - 5950X vs 7950X
Workloads - Single ThreadedRyzen 9 5950XRyzen 9 7950XRow 0 - Cell 3
Integer1467180623.1%
Floating Point1874228822%
Crypto4188714070.5%
Workloads - Multi ThreadedRow 4 - Cell 1 Row 4 - Cell 2 Row 4 - Cell 3
Integer167352427345%
Floating Point193042665238%
Crypto80061246555.7%

While the floating point and integer results are impressive on their own, Ryzen 7000's biggest performance gains come from the chip's substantially higher Cryptograph benchmark results — which are almost 71% higher than the 5950X's results in single-core performance. 

This unexpected leap in performance can be attributed to Ryzen 7000 adding the AVX-512 instruction set, which Ryzen 5000 lacks. AVX-512 is one of the newer instruction sets seen on modern processors, and it can have a remarkable performance uplift in apps that support it.

The problem with AVX-512 is its adoption rate, which is very low by today's standards. Despite being available for over five years, very few apps currently leverage it — as a result, only a minority of power users and content creators are able to use AVX-512's capabilities.

By contrast, integer and floating-point workloads are the most common workloads you'll see on processors today. Gaming, multitasking, production, and just about everything else uses some form of integer instructions or floating-point calculations.

In other words, Ryzen 7000's Geekbench 5 performance results could be considered somewhat misleading. The crypto scores, while incredible to see, will only really affect a small fraction of Ryzen 7000 users. On top of this, Geekbench 5 has been known to weight its average scores to give some subtests more importance than others. 

Unfortunately, this has been an ongoing issue with some subtests — we saw this exact issue with the Core i9-11900's Geekbench results. But with the introduction of AVX-512 on newer processors — including Intel's 11th Gen Rocket Lake platform, these wide performance deviations between workloads have become much more prominent — making general performance estimations difficult with some synthetic benchmarks.

That said, Ryzen 7000's real-world performance is very good in Geekbench 5, with integer and floating-point scores well ahead of Ryzen 5000's. But the addition of AVX-512 combined with AVX-512-intensive benchmark runs make Ryzen 7000's single-core performance look just inflated like we saw with Rocket Lake CPUs — it's good, but it's not that good.

Aaron Klotz
Freelance News Writer

Aaron Klotz is a freelance writer for Tom’s Hardware US, covering news topics related to computer hardware such as CPUs, and graphics cards.

  • Arbie
    Disregarding the Crypto / AVX-512 results you show, Zen 4 still has the overall performance gains that AMD was touting - right? If so you should point that out. Otherwise the reader has to wonder or go find out if AMD used Geekbench.

    You have a fair technical point re @Benchleaks results, but if read quickly your article comes across as challenging all the claims so far.
    Reply
  • drlava
    An important point not made here: this means geekbench results for Intel chips with AVX512 were also inappropriately highly ranked compared to real-world performance and compared to previous AMD chips, and this has been going on for years.

    right? Right?
    Reply
  • FunSurfer
    "frequency of 57.38GHz " is not bad
    Reply
  • JamesJones44
    drlava said:
    An important point not made here: this means geekbench results for Intel chips with AVX512 were also inappropriately highly ranked compared to real-world performance and compared to previous AMD chips, and this has been going on for years.

    right? Right?

    Yes, minus Alder Lake which doesn't enable AVX512 by default and is fully disabled on the latest versions.
    Reply
  • Brian D Smith
    But....and this is the BIG BUT(T) in the room - where AVX512 is used, this is...amazing stuff!
    Reply
  • quadibloc2
    It is true that, at present, not a lot of programs can use AVX-512 instructions. However, now that a (soon to be) widely available processor has them, won't that number increase? What I'm puzzled about is that, since the new Ryzen chips are using a 256-bit floating-point unit for the AVX-512 instructions, I thought that meant that the performance uplift of AVX-512 over the former 256-bit vectors would be very limited.
    It's important to note that the Geekbench results don't conform to the performance increase users will see right away, but it should be noted the situation is likely to improve; otherwise, it would be like saying of the original Ryzens that having 8 cores is meaningless, because real software doesn't try to use more than four. That was true, but it changed quickly.
    Of course, Intel chips are likely to start having AVX-512 again soon, now, and their implementations may be superior to AMD's. (Isn't competition wonderful?)
    Reply
  • TheEmrys
    This is a really odd article. Where was it when Intel alone had AVX 512? Why does it matter more now when AMD does it, when Intel has done it since 2016? While this may not be the case here, it really seems like a post inspired by the Intel PR machine.
    Reply
  • shady28
    TheEmrys said:
    This is a really odd article. Where was it when Intel alone had AVX 512? Why does it matter more now when AMD does it, when Intel has done it since 2016? While this may not be the case here, it really seems like a post inspired by the Intel PR machine.

    It's in the article below regarding AVX on Rocket Lake.

    Maybe you should just delete that post.

    "In a nutshell, you shouldn't trust Geekbench 5's overall scores as an accurate measure of Rocket Lake's performance, and there's a technical reason why. We've encountered strange phenomenons with Geekbench 5, where its use of AVX-512 can widely skew the results in the encryption subtest. "

    https://www.tomshardware.com/news/i9-11900k-geekbench-4
    Reply
  • JimboPalmer
    Intel hampered AVX-512 adoption 3 ways:
    They put it in a small selection of mostly server CPUs, so it was hard to get practice writing code.

    Each generation supports a subtly different instruction set.

    The entire CPU slows down if any AVX-512 instructions are being executed.

    I hope AMD standardizes on a single version across all Zen 4s, and ideally it runs without slowing other programs. Then AVX-512 can get more wide spread acceptance.
    Reply
  • cfbcfb
    Ah. I had noted the odd use of the Geekbench results, since that's not one of the 2-3 commonly used cpu benchmarks.

    Now we know why. Apparently the desire to bury Intel intruded well into the land of make believe?

    Shame, the story was already good but from the start you could easily see the push-pull between the "honest" 15% alleged performance gains and the "complete boolsheet" 40% that some of the marketing folks wanted to push.
    Reply