AMD launched the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition in March 2026 to mixed reviews. While reviewers and enthusiasts appreciated the technological achievement of the dual 3D cache design, it was not a significant upgrade over the regular 9950X3D in gaming tasks, and it was way more expensive. Carrying a hefty $900 price tag, the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 is not a cheap processor to buy, so you can imagine how one would feel if you got shortchanged for a 9950X3D instead.
That is what happened to one Personality-Pleasant over on Reddit, who claims to have bought a Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition from Amazon, only to get a Ryzen 9 9950X3D in the box instead. The redditor posted on the r/GamersNexus subreddit that they can clearly see through the packaging that the CPU's heatspreader says "AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D." This leaves them with a CPU that is currently $200-$250 cheaper.
What's more important in the poster's story is that the box was fully sealed, yet the processor was not correct. This leaves us with three possibilities. One: an error was made in the packaging of the CPU at AMD, which put a 9950X3D in a 9950X3D2 box. Two: an error was made in engraving the heatspreader, and that is indeed a 9950X3D2 CPU. Third, and by far the most likely, the CPU inside was replaced after removing and carefully reapplying the factory seal.
- Read more: Redditor gets a cheap Ryzen 9 9950X3D, only to find the entire CPU missing under a 3D-printed base
- Read more: AMD officially unveils the Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition, armed with 208MB of cache and a 200W TDP
- Read more: AMD's flagship Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 is sitting in Amazon's top 10 best-selling CPUs despite failing to impress reviewers
It is hard to imagine AMD making such a blunder as putting the wrong CPU in the box or labeling it with the wrong name. Therefore, the most realistic explanation is that the CPU was a return unit that had been tampered with, and that Amazon failed to perform the necessary checks before shipping it to the Reddit user. The "switch" likely occurred when the first customer bought the 9950X3D2, replaced the CPU, and then returned the product to Amazon.

Now, the user did not share a photo of the seal in the Reddit post, but they claim that it was still intact. Regardless, the fault lies with both Amazon and AMD if this were true. Amazon failed to conduct the necessary quality checks before restocking a returned product, and AMD's security seal should be questioned if it can be removed and replaced by a random customer.
The customer claims that Amazon Canada is processing his request and organizing a return, and that they have promised such a mishap will never happen again. Regardless, it is a sign for customers to stay alert, always record the unboxing process, and never accept a product if the factory seals are broken or tampered with.





