The Ryzen 7 9800X3D is the rare flagship gaming chip that doesn't actually punish your cooler. It's a 120 W TDP part, and unlike the 9950X or any Intel Core Ultra 9 above it, AMD's 2nd-gen 3D V-Cache stack sits under the compute die rather than on top — which means heat reaches the IHS more efficiently than it did on the 7800X3D, and in turn means most quality coolers handle it without breaking a sweat. After cross-referencing independent benchmarks, the picture is consistent: the Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE held the 9800X3D at 72 °C in Cinebench R23 at $35; a 360 mm AIO like Arctic's Liquid Freezer III drops that another 5–10 °C under the same sustained load. Most buyers don't need the AIO.
Noctua NH-D15 chromax.Black
Dual-tower air · 165 mm · 2× 140 mm NF-A15 · 6-year warranty
The cooler I'd put on my own 9800X3D. Six 6 mm heatpipes, two NF-A15 140 mm fans that have spent a decade as the noise-vs-airflow benchmark every other manufacturer tries to beat.
- Genuinely silent under any 9800X3D load
- Outlasts three CPU upgrade cycles — no pump to fail
- chromax.Black version drops the brown/cream for a universal aesthetic
- 165 mm tall — measure your case before you buy
- Offset design may require front fan removal for tall RAM kits
The case for going air with this chip: the 9800X3D's 120 W TDP is well within what a flagship dual-tower cooler can absorb without ever spinning up. AIOs win on absolute peak temperature in stress tests, but the gap is 5–7 °C — and the NH-D15 will outlast three CPU upgrade cycles where an AIO needs replacing every 4–6 years as the pump bearings wear and coolant evaporates. Six-year warranty plus Noctua's free socket-upgrade kits means you really do buy this once.
Arctic Liquid Freezer III 360 A-RGB
360 mm AIO · 38 mm radiator · A-RGB · 6-year warranty
Arctic took the Liquid Freezer II — already the price-per-degree king — and made it noticeably better. Thicker 38 mm radiator, a small VRM-cooling fan on the pump head nobody else bothers with, and pricing that consistently undercuts Corsair and NZXT by $40–60.
- Outperforms most $200 AIOs at half the price
- Thicker radiator gives real headroom for sustained loads
- Includes the AM5 contact frame in the box
- Fans can hit ~32 dBA at full speed — set a sane fan curve
- Pump cable routing is finicky
If you want the cleanest 9800X3D temperatures without spending flagship-AIO money, this is the answer. Independent benchmarks consistently put the LF III within a couple degrees of the $250 NZXT Kraken Elite under Cinebench R23 and identical under gaming loads. The thicker radiator is the trick — most '360 mm' AIOs use a 27 mm rad, the Arctic uses 38 mm, which means more coolant volume and more surface area before heat cycles back to the pump.
Lian Li Galahad II Trinity 360
360 mm AIO · daisy-chain ARGB · interchangeable pump caps · 5-year warranty
The cooler you buy when the build needs to look as good as it performs. Daisy-chain connector on the fans means a single cable instead of nine, infinity-mirror pump head with three interchangeable caps, and thermals that compete with the Arctic at premium money.
- Daisy-chain cable management is genuinely game-changing for clean builds
- Pump head has three swappable visual caps
- L-Connect 3 software unifies fan + pump RGB across system
- $50–80 more than the Arctic for similar 9800X3D thermals
- Software is Windows-only — Linux loses unified RGB control
If you've already committed to the Lian Li ecosystem — UNI Fan SL-Infinity case fans, a Lancool / O11 chassis, the L-Connect 3 software stack — this AIO completes the picture. The daisy-chain pump-and-fan connector is the genuine selling point: instead of routing nine separate cables (three fans × three connectors each, plus the pump's own three), you route one. The aesthetic payoff in a glass-sided build is meaningful.
The numbers.
| NH-D15 chromax | Arctic LF III 360 | Galahad II 360 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Dual-tower air | 360 mm AIO | 360 mm AIO |
| Height | 165 mm | n/a | n/a |
| Fans | 2× 140 mm NF-A15 | 3× 120 mm Arctic P12 | 3× 120 mm SL-Inf ARGB |
| Pump | — | VRM-cooling | Daisy-chain |
| Noise (full) | 47.3 dBA | ~32 dBA | ~30 dBA |
| 9800X3D R23 | 74.2 °C | 85.8 °C | ~70 °C |
| RGB | None | A-RGB fans | Infinity-mirror |
| Warranty | 6 yr | 6 yr | 5 yr |
Other strong options.
Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE V3
The budget air-cooling king. Sub-$40, six 6 mm heat pipes, dual 120 mm fans up to 2,000 RPM. Tested at 72 °C on the 9800X3D in Cinebench R23 — outperforming coolers three times its price.
Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 SE
Thermalright's small upgrade over the Peerless Assassin: seven 6 mm heat pipes vs six, dual TL-C12B fans with marginally better static pressure. 3–4 °C cooler under sustained 9800X3D loads at $5–10 more.
Be Quiet! Dark Rock Pro 5
The German alternative to the NH-D15. Quiet, well-built, slightly less peak airflow but better-looking in dark builds. Real choice if you can't stand the offset asymmetric look of the Noctua.
The buying guide.
Air vs AIO
The 9800X3D does not require liquid cooling. A flagship dual-tower air cooler handles it permanently. A 240 mm AIO covers everything a 360 mm AIO does for this specific chip; the 360 only matters if you're also targeting a 9950X3D upgrade or pushing PBO past the +200 MHz / 1.4 V curve. For most buyers, the choice comes down to aesthetics and case clearance, not thermal need.
Case clearance
The NH-D15 needs 165 mm of CPU cooler height. Most mid-tower ATX cases support this; check your case's spec sheet. Compact cases like the Lancool 207 max out at ~155 mm. AIOs sidestep the height issue but trade for radiator-mount space — confirm your case takes a 360 mm radiator in the top or front before committing.
Noise vs cooling
Air coolers can be made silent at the cost of slightly higher temperatures. AIOs are louder at full speed but allow you to keep the fans low and let pump speed do more of the work. For a quiet-first build, air wins; for a max-cooling build with aesthetics, AIO wins.
Warranty and longevity
Air coolers are essentially permanent — no pump to fail, no coolant to evaporate. Noctua and Be Quiet ship 6-year warranties and routinely honor them past expiration. AIOs typically have 5–6 year warranties; pump bearings are the failure point and you should expect to replace the cooler within that window. For a build you intend to keep beyond 5 years, the math favors air.
FAQ.
No. AMD ships the 9800X3D as a 'WOF' (Without Fan) part — same as the 9700X, 9900X, and 9950X. You need to buy a cooler separately.
If your AM4 cooler has an AM5 mounting kit (most coolers from 2022+ ship with one), yes — AM4 and AM5 use the same retention layout. Older coolers may need a free upgrade kit from the manufacturer.
Yes. The 9800X3D's 120 W TDP is well within 240 mm AIO capacity. A 360 mm AIO buys you 5–10 °C of headroom under Cinebench R23 (negligible during gaming), and only matters if you're upgrading to a 9950X3D or Threadripper later.
Precision Boost Overdrive can push the 9800X3D from 120 W stock to 140–160 W effective. A budget air cooler ($30–40) will start thermal-throttling under PBO + sustained Cinebench. A flagship dual-tower air or any quality 240 mm+ AIO handles PBO loads cleanly.
AM5 chips have a known IHS-flex issue under stock retention pressure. A contact frame reduces flex and can drop temps 4–7 °C. Most 360 mm AIOs include one in the box now. Worth using if your cooler ships with it; not worth buying separately for most users.
For most buyers: the NH-D15.
For glass-sided builds: the Galahad II.
For best value: the Arctic LF III.
The 9800X3D's modest 120 W TDP and improved heat-pathing means the cooler isn't a bottleneck unless you actively choose a bad one. Pick by aesthetics, case constraints, and how long you intend to keep the build — not by chasing the last 3 °C.