RTX 5050 + Ryzen 5 3600 Gaming Benchmark Test Results (BF 6 Open Beta)



Pairing a mid-range CPU like the AMD Ryzen 5 3600 with the newer NVIDIA RTX 5050 raises one big question: is it still a capable combo for modern games like Battlefield 6 Open Beta? To answer that, we ran a benchmark test in a demanding multiplayer FPS to see how this setup holds up in real gameplay.


Test Setup

  • GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5050 (8GB VRAM)

  • CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 3600 (6 cores, 12 threads)

  • RAM: 16GB DDR4

  • API: DirectX 12

  • Game Tested: Competitive online shooter

Both CPU and GPU were monitored for temperature, power usage, and clock speeds during the test.

Performance Results

  • Average FPS: 184

  • Current FPS (live reading): ~120

  • 1% Low FPS: 29

  • Frametime Latency: 1.4 ms

This shows that the RTX 5050 easily pushes high frame rates in 1080p, even when paired with the older Ryzen 5 3600. The average frame rate above 180 FPS makes it well-suited for high refresh rate monitors.

Temperature & Power Efficiency

  • GPU: 56% load, 58°C, ~87W power draw

  • CPU: 79% load, 69°C, ~59W power draw

Both components ran efficiently, with temperatures well within safe ranges. The RTX 5050 in particular showed strong efficiency, delivering high FPS without excessive heat or power usage.

Bottleneck Check

While the Ryzen 5 3600 isn’t the newest CPU, it kept up well with the RTX 5050 in this test. Usage levels (GPU 56% vs CPU 79%) suggest some CPU limitation in CPU-heavy scenarios, but not enough to cause major stutter.

Conclusion

The RTX 5050 + Ryzen 5 3600 combo proves to be a surprisingly capable pairing for 1080p high-FPS gaming. Players can expect smooth performance in competitive shooters, with room to push even higher in optimized titles.

If you’re running a similar setup, you don’t need an immediate upgrade—this combo still delivers excellent value in 2025.

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