
Same thing in the Ryzen master and MSI control center even if its a 30 Mhz change. For now though, if you own a Ryzen 7 5800X3D, just be cautious when rummaging around your motherboard's overclocking software, and don't tweak any overclocking settings. On the stable release of the BIOS, there are no overclocking options available for the CPU (Cannot change clock or voltages) and any changes to the RAM except XMP profile crashes the system.PBO options are all there and functioning. Whether the fix will come in a new AGESA microcode update, chipset update, or software-side change is unclear.

We have no deadline for a possible fix, but we are confident AMD will get to the bottom of this as soon as possible - especially since YouTuber Der8aur killed a 7950X3D while fiddling with similar settings less than two weeks ago.

The PC immediately shut down after the second voltage adjustment and never booted back up. We don't know how the chip died specifically, but apparently Igor pushed the core voltage past 1.3v after two manual adjustments. After overvolting the chip to 1.3v and beyond with MSI Center, the 5800X3D reportedly died almost immediately. Igor of Igor's Lab was able to demonstrate the danger of this bug with his own 5800X3D. To make matters worse, this issue was also discovered in Asus, Gigabyte, and ASRock software, marking this as a platform-wide issue. However, the application bypasses all artificial voltage and clock speed limitations altogether, turning this into a real danger for imprudent 5800X3D owners.

At first glance, this looks like a win for enthusiasts and overclockers. Igor's Lab has discovered a major glitch in the MSI Center Windows app that allows AMD's best CPU for gaming, the Ryzen 7 5800X3D, to be overvolted and overclocked beyond its limits.
