AMD Ryzen PRO 9000: Zen Five and 3D V-Cache for 3D Workstations

Published on May 15, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

AMD has unveiled its new Ryzen PRO 9000 series, based on the Zen 5 architecture, featuring six models designed for enterprise environments and workstations. The Ryzen 9 PRO 9965X3D, with 16 cores and 3D V-Cache technology, marks a milestone by bringing this stacked memory to the professional segment. This combination promises significant improvements in 3D modeling tasks, simulations, and rendering, where low latency and extra bandwidth are critical.

AMD Ryzen PRO 9000 Zen 5 3D V-Cache for 3D workstations and professional modeling

Rendering and Simulation Performance: The Impact of 3D V-Cache 🚀

The inclusion of 3D V-Cache in a PRO processor is no coincidence. In 3D workflows, such as CPU rendering with engines like V-Ray or Blender Cycles, and in complex physical simulations, the additional cache reduces memory bottlenecks. Compared to the previous generation Ryzen PRO 7000, the 9965X3D offers up to 20% more performance in scenes with dense meshes and high-resolution textures. For workstation virtualization, the 16 Zen 5 cores allow running multiple virtual machines with CAD software without degradation, approaching the performance of traditional HEDT CPUs but with a more controlled TDP.

Is It Time to Migrate to a PRO Workstation with Zen 5? 💡

For the 3D professional working with final renders or real-time simulations, the Ryzen 9 PRO 9965X3D represents a qualitative leap. 3D V-Cache technology, previously reserved for gaming, now justifies its price in environments where every millisecond counts. However, for purely modeling or low-complexity design tasks, non-X3D models like the Ryzen 7 PRO 9755X3D offer a more accessible balance. The final decision depends on the type of workload: if your workflow is bottlenecked by memory access, the 9965X3D is the smartest option in the current PRO market.

How does the implementation of 3D V-Cache technology in the new Ryzen PRO 9000 impact the performance of 3D modeling and rendering applications compared to previous generations?

(PS: RAM is never enough, like coffees on a Monday morning)