AMD Medusa Halo “Ryzen AI MAX” SoCs To Feature LPDDR6 Memory Support

Hassan Mujtaba
A close-up of an AMD Ryzen AI MAX Series chip alongside a Samsung LPDDR6 chip, with the word 'HALO' in the corner.
How We Rate Rumors
  • 0-20%: Unlikely - Lacks credible sources
  • 21-40%: Questionable - Some concerns remain
  • 41-60%: Plausible - Reasonable evidence
  • 61-80%: Probable - Strong evidence
  • 81-100%: Highly Likely - Multiple reliable sources
RUMOR ASSESSMENT

85%

Highly Likely

AMD's next-generation Ryzen AI MAX SoCs, codenamed Medusa Halo, will feature support for LPDDR6 memory.

AMD Medusa Halo "Ryzen AI MAX" SoCs To Elevate Bandwidth Performance With LPDDR6 Memory

AMD's Ryzen AI MAX series saw two new additions at this year's CES, and the company is already working on the refresh for its first-gen Halo lineup. The first-generation Strix Halo series already maintains a super-premium position as an SoC for AI PCs, and with Gorgon Halo (Ryzen AI MAX 400), AMD will continue to push performance further with boosted CPU/GPU clocks and higher memory speeds.

Related Story AMD Says It Had To Rebuild The Ryzen 5 5800X3D To Bring It Back For AM4’s 10th Anniversary

As for the true successor to Strix Halo, that will come in the form of Medusa Halo or Ryzen AI MAX 500 series. These will be scheduled sometime in 2027-2028, and will feature brand new Zen 6 CPU cores and RDNA 5 GPU cores. As per rumors, AMD will have a diverse set of Medusa SoCs, with entry-level SoCs getting RDNA 3.5 iGPU cores while more premium and Halo SoCs will get newer RDNA 5 iGPU configs.

Although it's too early to tell what kind of specs we will get with Medusa Halo, up to 24 cores, and either similar or beefier GPU core configs, it looks like the platform itself will take advantage of the next-gen LPDDR6 memory standard.

We know from JEDEC's own confirmation that LPDDR6 memory will feature speeds of 14,400 MT/s across a 24-bit wide channel, and with 38.4 GB/s bandwidth per module. Strix Halo initially featured up to 8000 MT/s support, with up to 256 GB/s bandwidth. This will be updated to 8533 MT/s in the upcoming refresh lineup.

But with Medusa Halo, even with the same bus-width of 256-bit, we are looking at a bandwidth of 460 GB/s, a 80% uplift. This would prove to be a major uplift for the onboard GPU, resulting in far better performance. Currently, Intel's Panther Lake 12Xe3 SoCs feature the fastest LPDDR configuration of up to 9600 MT/s on notebook PCs. While Intel is building up its own SoC roadmap with powerful offerings and working with NVIDIA, AMD remains unfazed by such partnerships and has already stated that it will continue to offer disruptive technologies in the future.

This would make AMD Ryzen AI MAX 500 "Medusa Halo" a powerful SoC, building on the foundation of Strix and Gorgon Halo, which are disruptive offerings for the AI PC and gaming segment. AMD's recently introduced Ryzen AI Halo platform will also receive updates with each respective generation of Halo SoCs.

AMD Ryzen AI MAX Series:

Family NameRyzen AI MAX 500Ryzen AI MAX 400Ryzen AI MAX 300
CodenameMedusa HaloGorgon HaloStrix Halo
Process TechN2PN4N4
CPU ArchitectureZen 6Zen 5Zen 5
Max Cores / Threads24/48?16/3216/32
Max CPU ClocksTBDTBD 5.1 GHz
Max L2 CacheTBD16 MB16 MB
Max L3 Cache96 MB?64 MB64 MB
GPU ArchitectureRDNA 5RDNA 3.5RDNA 3.5
Max GPU CoresTBD40 CUs40 CUs
Max GPU ClocksTBDTBD2.9 GHz
Memory SupportLPDDR6LPDDR5XLPDDR5X
Memory Speed14,400 MT/s?8533 MT/s8000 MT/s
Memory BandwidthTBD273 GB/s256 GB/s
TDPTBDTBD45-120W
Launch2027-20282026-20272025
Hassan Mujtaba Photo

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech's Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

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