The iGPU is no slouch, and while it only features 8 x VEGA cores besides the 4 Ryzen cores, it’s able to deliver some suitably impressive performance for those who don’t have a dedicated GPU (dGPU). Obviously, the 2400G is faster, thanks to its 8 thread design, and an increase to 11 VEGA cores.
In 3DMark, Unigine, and others, it sets some pretty promising scores for those looking to perform day-to-day desktop tasks, as well as gaming. I would typically provide a more in-depth analysis of these results, but with only the two to compare, the numbers are pretty obvious. As you would expect, the 2200G performs pretty well, and the 2400G a bit better.
For rendering and transcoding tasks, they’re far from the fastest number crunchers, but that’s to be expected given it was never designed to handle those tasks.
The most significant thing to take away here is that the 2200G saw exceptional improvements in every benchmark with overclocking. Since all Ryzen’s are unlocked, you would be mad not to grab all that free performance from this CPU.
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