Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

AMD bolts Wraith cooler to new CPU releases, offering boosted performance

Add as a preferred source on Google

Looking to change the way the world looks at stock coolers, AMD’s newly released Kaveri-based A10-7890K APU is joining the packed CPU line up with a brand new cooler design, known as the Wraith. Packing heatpipes, a huge surface area across many aluminium fins and in the case of that flagship APU, an AMD branded plastic shroud for branding and to direct airflow.

It is perhaps telling of AMD’s place in the CPU game that the cooler is receiving almost as much attention as the chips themselves. However, it is playing an important role in this new chip release, as it’s the additional cooling power of the Wraith stock cooler which is making it possible to bump up performance on the 7890K.

Recommended Videos

Operating at 200MHz more than its slightly-lower-end cousin, the 7870K, that bump in clock speed is thanks to the added cooling potential of the Wraith. It allows the 7890K to reach a turbo speed of 4.3GHz, making it the most powerful APU that AMD currently offers.

It’s not much more expensive than its slower variant, despite the added power. At $165 with the new cooler included, it represents a reasonable option for gamers on a budget – especially considering they may not have to fork out for an aftermarket CPU chiller now too.

However, it may still be better to opt for the A10-7870K instead, as it its price tag is just $140, and AMD has seen fit to sell it with a “new 125W thermal solution,” which appears to be just the Wraith cooler without the plastic shroud. At the same TDP as the 7890K, it seems likely that overclocking it by a small margin should be perfectly viable.

Also released alongside the new high-end APU and cooler combination is an entry-evel solution, the AMD Athlon X4 880K. Based on the FM2 architecture, the 880K also benefits from a 300MHz bump over its predecessor, the 860K. The 880K is also unlocked, so it could potentially be boosted to much higher speeds.

Aimed at low-end gaming desktops, this  quad-core chip is priced at just $95, so it’s  far from an expensive solution. And it comes with that same de-shrouded Wraith cooler as the 7870K.

It’s thought that this push for low-end gaming may be AMD’s way of reconnecting its CPUs with gamers, before hitting them much harder later this year with the Zen launch, which is expected to be more competitive with Intel offerings in terms of performance and efficiency.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
Asus’ powerful new gaming laptop with a 240Hz Mini LED display makes its global debut
The 2026 ROG Strix G18 pairs up to RTX 5080 graphics with an Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus CPU
ROG Strix G18 (2026) laptop

Asus has started rolling out the 2026 ROG Strix G18 globally, and the easiest way to describe it is as a slightly toned-down version of the ridiculous ROG Strix Scar 18. It keeps the same 24-core Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus processor but tops out at an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 Laptop GPU instead of the Scar’s RTX 5090. (via Notebookcheck)

The Mini LED model gets the best balance

Read more
Every app on my phone has decided I need AI, and none of them bothered to ask
AI assistants are invading everything from photo libraries to messaging apps, and dismissing them only seems to guarantee they’ll return later.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

My wife doesn’t use AI very much. She isn’t philosophically opposed to it, nor is she waiting for the machines to overthrow civilization. She simply opens Google Photos because she wants to look at her photos.

Lately, however, the app keeps greeting her with invitations to try its AI tools. Google would very much like her to search her library conversationally, generate something new, or ask Gemini to edit a photo. She dismisses the prompt, gets on with her life, and eventually meets it again.

Read more
Shopping for Back-to-school? These are the gaming laptops I’d recommend
Powerful enough for AAA games, practical enough for everyday lectures, assignments, and everything in between.
oled gaming laptop

Every gamer knows the pain of trying to do too much with the wrong hardware. Back-to-School is the perfect excuse to fix that. A good gaming laptop shouldn’t just hit high frame rates -- it should also survive endless browser tabs, assignments, coding sessions, video edits, and everything else college throws at it. These five machines strike that balance better than most, which is exactly why they’d be my picks this semester.

Alienware 16 Aurora

Read more