AMD Athlon 200GE or Intel Pentium Gold G5400? A Review

In the course of our reviews, when we get a chance to get hands on with random processors, we run our test suite and add the data to our database. Sometimes that doesnt materialize directly into a review, but at least we have the data. Two very similar CPUs have come across my desk recently:

In the course of our reviews, when we get a chance to get hands on with random processors, we run our test suite and add the data to our database. Sometimes that doesn’t materialize directly into a review, but at least we have the data. Two very similar CPUs have come across my desk recently: AMD’s dual core Athlon 200GE, and Intel’s Pentium G5400. Both chips round to the $60 mark, have some form of integrated graphics, and are aimed at budget systems.

This is going to be fun

One of the perennial issues with modern technology review cycles is that there’s a lot of focus on the high-end parts. These are the ones that the manufacturers sample: they have the highest margins, but are also the halo products: if they sit atop of the standings, then the hope is that that influence will trickle down into the rest of the product range, typically the high-volume parts. There is also the added benefit that more people want to hear about the best of the best. It’s a reason why there are so many Ferrari and Aston Martin ‘WOW’ pieces in written and video media.

Normally this would make sampling very difficult. If we were reviewing cars, anyway. The two chips in today’s analysis, the Intel Pentium Gold G5400 and the AMD Athlon 200GE, cost around $60 apiece, which I forked out for personally as I was never expecting to be sampled. (AMD asked if I wanted a 200GE sample two days after my retail unit arrived, go figure. I sent that on to Gavin for his 7-year old’s new gaming system.)

AMD vs Intel at ~$60
 AMD Athlon
200GE
Intel Pentium
Gold G5400
Cores / Threads2 / 42 / 4
MicroarchitectureZenCoffee Lake
MotherboardsX470, X370, B450
B350, A320, A300
Z390, Z370, Q370
H370, B360, H310
CPU Frequency3.2 GHz3.7 GHz
L2 Cache512 KB/core256 KB/core
L3 Cache2 MB / core2 MB / core
Integrated GraphicsVega 3
192 SPs
UHD 610
12 EUs (96 ALUs)
DDR4 SupportDDR4-2933DDR4-2666
GPU FrequencyUp to 1000 MHz350-1050 MHz
TDP35 W54 W (2-core die version)
58 W (4-core die version)*
Price$55 (SRP)$64 (1k/u)
* Intel harvests both 2+2 and 4+2 dies to make G5400 parts. It's impossible to know which one you have without removing the lid and measuring the die area.

When we stack up the two processors side by side, it gets interesting. Both are dual core, quad thread parts. The Intel processor has the frequency advantage, running at 3.7 GHz compared to the 3.2 GHz of AMD, but the AMD has beefier Vega 3 integrated graphics compared to the UHD 610 (GT1) graphics of the Intel chip. One sore point might be the TDP, where the AMD chip has a rating of 35W and the Intel chip is rated at 58W, however as we’ll see in the review, neither of them come close to those values.

Tackling the budget end of the market is fun. I’ve been a long-time advocate for budget builders to build a system piece-by-piece, getting one high-end part at a time rather than smearing a budget across several average parts at once. Under this philosophy, these processors could very well be the start of one of those builds, only costing an average of $60 MSRP. Note that under this philosophy, you might end up with that big graphics card before a processor that can power it. We’re covering those benchmarks as well.

Before you click further, place your bets on who you think will win: the Intel Pentium Gold G5400, or the AMD Athlon 200GE?

Latest News: While neither processor is officially overclockable, since we tested for this article it was recently reported that MSI motherboards with certain BIOS versions will allow users to overclock the 200GE to ~3.9 GHz. I've asked Gavin to contribute, and he managed a nice 3.9 GHz over the 3.2 GHz base clock. Head over to page 21 for the details.

Pages In This Review

  • Analysis and Competition
  • Test Bed and Setup
  • 2018 and 2019 Benchmark Suite
  • CPU Performance: System Tests
  • CPU Performance: Rendering Tests
  • CPU Performance: Office Tests
  • CPU Performance: Encoding Tests
  • CPU Performance: Legacy Tests
  • Gaming: Integrated Graphics
  • Gaming: World of Tanks enCore
  • Gaming: Final Fantasy XV
  • Gaming: Shadow of War
  • Gaming: Civilization 6
  • Gaming: Ashes Classic
  • Gaming: Strange Brigade
  • Gaming: Grand Theft Auto V
  • Gaming: Far Cry 5
  • Gaming: Shadow of the Tomb Raider
  • Gaming: F1 2018
  • Power Consumption
  • Overclocking
  • Conclusions and Final Words
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