Following the X670, X670, B650E, and B650 versions that were released last year, AMD has unveiled the A620 chipset for the Ryzen 7000 series.
The A620 can accommodate most user requirements thanks to its 4 DDR5 memory slots that can hold up to 128GB of memory and up to 32 PCIe 4.0 lanes. Additionally, it has AMD Smart Access Memory, which improves performance in memory-demanding games and apps.
For demanding home and workplace users, the AMD A620 provides a stable and streamlined platform with a variety of connectivity and bandwidth choices, including DDR5 memory, AMD EXPO technology, simple memory overclocking, and PCIe 4.0 lanes.
Memory Overclocking Supported on A620
- Up to 6000 MHz Overclocked DDR5 EXPO Memory
- Dual-Channel, One-Dim-Per-Channel Configuration
- Processor Overclocking, PBO, and Curve Optimizer Not Supported
A620 Supports 65W TDP and Beyond
- Ideal for Ryzen 7000 Processors with 65W TDP
- Higher TDP Models Will Boot with AGESA Version Support
- Multithreaded Performance May Be Limited by VRM Power Limits
- Minimal Impact on Game Performance Expected
The AMD A620 Chipset has a number of features that make it a good option for most users, and it will undoubtedly be a favourite among users and players on a tight budget. Since it will be supported by ASRock, ASUS, BIOSTAR, GIGABYTE, and MSI as partners, the AMD A620 will have a wide variety of choices for AMD Ryzen 7000 series processors.
Starting on March 31, 2023, motherboards with AMD’s new A620 chipset for the Ryzen 7000 Series CPU of the AM5 platform will be sold for US$85 (roughly Rs. 7,003).