Last week AMD announced their Ryzen 5000G processors with integrated graphics, and in the middle of a GPU crisis, this has really gone well in the market. The stocks at launch seem really good, and products were available at MSRPs, so people naturally have put their cash on these APUs.
As we said in the Ryzen 5 5600G review, AMD really made an opportunistic move in addressing the people who are desperate for the game but aren’t willing to break their banks to buy a discrete GPU. So, the strategy has worked because, in the CPU sales numbers of Mindfactory, we see AMD clearly dominating.
AMD had a net sales of 4550 processors while Intel had only 650 of them sold; AMD also had a better Average Selling Price or ASP – 320 euros and Intel having a lower 229 euros. So, AMD had a better market share of 87.5%, while Intel had a mere 12.5%, whereas the Red team had a massive revenue of 90.7%.
Among the processors sold for AMD, their star of the show was indeed the Ryzen 5 5600G, whose 940 units were sold, followed by Ryzen 7 5700G, which also had sales of 840 units. Then, you obviously have the Ryzen 5 5600X, Ryzen 7 5800X, Ryzen 9 5900X and Ryzen 5 3600 with sales of 760, 690, 370 and 290 units, respectively.
Out of the Top 10 CPUs sold at Mindfactory, the Top 8 of them were by AMD, while Intel had only two of them – the Core i5 10400F and Core i7 11700K. Honestly, this is not surprising, but AMD’s stock situation of Ryzen 5000G processors are really good, which is a good sign for system builders.