
CPUs & Processors — AMD Ryzen & Intel Core
Gaming & Workstation CPUs — AMD Ryzen & Intel Core (22)
How to Choose a CPU
The right processor depends on what you do most — gaming, creation or general use — and how it pairs with your GPU, motherboard and cooler. Use the guide below to choose with confidence.
For gaming, high clock speeds and large cache matter more than raw core count. AMD's X3D chips (with 3D V-Cache) lead in many titles, while Intel Core Ultra and standard Ryzen deliver excellent all-round performance. A 6–8 core CPU is the gaming sweet spot for most builds.
Video editing, 3D rendering and heavy multitasking scale with cores and threads. Step up to 12–16 core Ryzen 9 or Core Ultra 9 chips for serious creator workloads, where the extra cores cut render and export times noticeably.
Pair the CPU tier to your graphics card so neither holds the other back. At 1440p and 4K the GPU does most of the work, so a mid-range CPU is plenty; at 1080p high-refresh, a faster CPU makes a bigger difference.
AMD Ryzen uses socket AM5; Intel Core Ultra uses LGA 1851 — each needs a matching motherboard chipset and DDR5 memory. Confirm the board's BIOS supports your chosen CPU, and pick the features you need before buying.
Match the cooler to the CPU's TDP — a good air cooler suits most chips, while higher-wattage or overclocked CPUs benefit from a large air cooler or an AIO liquid cooler. Check your case clearance and leave PSU headroom.





