AMD Threadripper PRO 7995WX: ninety six cores to crush your render

Published on May 18, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

AMD has once again raised the bar with its new Ryzen Threadripper PRO 7995WX. This workstation processor features 96 cores and 192 threads of pure raw power, designed for tasks that would bring any consumer-grade CPU to tears. We're talking massive rendering, scientific simulations, and workloads that require more muscle than a bodybuilder at a competition.

cinematic photorealistic engineering visualization of a massive 96-core CPU die being installed into a workstation motherboard, robotic arm placing the processor into a heavy-duty socket surrounded by industrial cooling pipes, 3D rendering software interface projected in holographic glow showing a complex architectural scene with millions of polygons, heat sinks glowing orange from intense computational load, motion blur on cooling fans spinning at high speed, dramatic dark workshop lighting with blue LED accents, ultra-detailed metallic surfaces and circuit traces, demonstrating raw processing power during a massive render workload

Zen 4 Architecture and Bottleneck-Free Bandwidth 🚀

This beast is based on the Zen 4 architecture, with 96 cores reaching frequencies of up to 5.1 GHz in boost mode. It supports 8-channel DDR5 memory and up to 2 TB of ECC RAM, ideal for handling massive datasets without breaking a sweat. Additionally, it features 128 PCIe 5.0 lanes for connecting multiple GPUs and ultra-fast storage. In multi-threaded benchmarks like Cinebench, this chip leaves other processors in the dust, offering performance previously seen only in high-end servers.

For When Your Render Takes Less Time Than Your Coffee ☕

Sure, having 96 cores is great, but then comes the time to pay the electricity bill, and you wonder if buying a second-hand nuclear power plant wouldn't have been a better idea. The fun part is that while your neighbor brags about their console, you can render a Pixar short film in the time it takes them to complain about their game running at 30 fps. Of course, don't try to put it in a mini ITX case, or you'll have to call the fire department to put out the radiator sitting on your desk.