Unlike Intel, which is just now realizing the value of socket longevity, AMD has practiced this philosophy for years with its AM4 socket, even after moving on to AM5. The red team has kept AM4 alive with strong 5000-series CPU options. The Ryzen 7 5800X3D, once celebrated as a top gaming CPU, was a standout. However, AMD discontinued the 5800X3D last year, leading many to think it was gone for good. That may not be the case.
AMD is reportedly relaunching the Ryzen 7 5800X3D very soon. Hardware leaker HXL on X spotted a leaked photo of an AMD presentation showing the Ryzen 7 5800X3D alongside a special AMD AM4 10-Year Anniversary Edition plaque, with a line of Chinese text that translates to "available starting Q2 2026."
At CES 2026, AMD hinted at the return of popular Zen 3 CPUs, as they use more affordable DDR4 memory modules amid soaring DDR5 prices. With the 10th anniversary of the AM4 socket approaching, it makes perfect sense for the red team to bring back the crown jewel of the lineup as an anniversary edition.
It's worth noting that the new version isn't a refresh, and the leaked specs appear identical to the original. As a reminder, these include 8 cores and 16 threads, 96 MB of shared L3 cache, a boost clock of up to 4.5 GHz, and a 105W TDP, though real-world power draw is often closer to half that. But AMD could use the opportunity to dress up the CPU with some shiny anniversary-edition packaging.

As for pricing, the 5800X3D launched at $449 four years ago but spent its final months retailing around $329, with an all-time low of $268. Given that the underlying manufacturing nodes are now more mature and cost-effective, there is reason to hope that AMD will price the anniversary edition aggressively.

The comeback is timely for budget AM4 gamers. The 5600X3D and 5500X3D are locked to specific regions, and most users have been settling for the Ryzen 5800X or 5600X, both of which are noticeably slower than X3D chips. The 5800X3D still holds its own in gaming today, delivering performance comparable to the Core Ultra 5 245K and the Ryzen 5 9600X. For anyone sitting on an older AM4 build, this could be an excellent upgrade option.
That said, none of this is confirmed by AMD, and despite HXL's solid track record of leaks, we'd suggest treating these rumors with some skepticism until something official comes out.




