AMD EPYC processors deliver the highest core counts in the dedicated server market — up to 32 cores per socket at competitive pricing. EPYC's large L3 cache (up to 256MB on the 9354) and multi-channel memory architecture make it the platform of choice for databases, virtualisation hosts, ML inference, and parallel compute workloads.
Bagful offers two AMD EPYC configurations in the bare metal range:
EPYC wins on core count, memory channels, and PCIe lanes per dollar. Xeon Gold wins on certain per-core workloads and software compatibility (some ISV licences price per socket rather than per core, favouring Xeon). For cloud hosting, virtualisation, ML inference, and database workloads where parallel throughput matters, EPYC is typically the better value proposition.
Web hosting resellers running 100+ cPanel accounts, managed WordPress hosting at scale, Kubernetes nodes, database servers (PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB at high connection counts), ML inference APIs, and enterprise applications requiring both core count and memory bandwidth.
Bagful operates bare metal infrastructure across 25 locations in the US, Europe, and Asia-Pacific. Your server runs wherever your users or compliance requirements demand. What does not change, regardless of which datacenter your hardware sits in, is who you are dealing with: a team based in India, available in IST, billing in rupees, with a phone number and WhatsApp you can actually reach.
This is the combination international providers cannot offer — global reach without the global support queue — and that pure Indian hosting companies cannot match. Bagful has operated from India for over 20 years. Our infrastructure advisors are in Mohali and Mumbai, not Manila or Dublin.
Support runs 10AM–7PM IST, Monday to Saturday. WhatsApp is available for critical infrastructure issues outside those hours. Every invoice is issued in INR with GST from Bagful International LLP — an Indian entity, not an overseas billing address.
Talk to a Bagful engineer — direct answers, no sales scripts.