If you’ve been looking to upgrade your PC components lately, you might’ve seen a recent surge in memory prices. Reasons for this include, among others, an expansion of AI infrastructure and an increase in workloads, resulting in demand for memory spiking at a rate that supply can’t match.
That’s according to the International Data Corporation (IDC), which forecasts that the shortage could have effects lasting till as far as 2027. We’ve previously covered some of those knock-on effects, such as a potential increase in starting prices for smartphones. In the PC space, an obvious consequence is a price hike for DDR5 memory sticks.
However, one peculiar result of this shortage is an increase in prices for older CPUs that utilise DDR4 memory. According to Tom’s Hardware, eBay prices for AMD’s Ryzen 7 5800X3D, released in 2022, have risen in price by as much as US$500.
On the surface, it’s easy to understand why this is happening. The 5800X3D was one of the most powerful AM4 gaming chips, as we noted in our review from three years ago. Boards utilising AMD’s newer socket, AM5, do not support DDR4 memory, so we can see why people would reach for the next best alternative.
Back when it was released, we called the Ryzen 7 5800X3D one of AMD’s best gaming chips at the time.





