AMD Ryzen 8000 “Strix Point” APU HWiNFO Leak Confirms 16 Next-Gen RDNA 3.5 GPU Cores

Sep 1, 2023 at 09:15am EDT
AMD Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" APU HWiNFO Leak Confirms 16 RDNA 3.5 GPU Cores & 12 Hybrid Zen 5 CPU Cores 1

The latest AMD Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" APU leak has been published which point out to 16 RDNA 3.5 GPU cores & 12 Zen 5 cores in a hybrid config.

AMD Ryzen 8000 APUs Codenamed Strix Point Feature 16 RDNA 3.5 GPU Compute Units In Latest Leak

The leak comes from Performance Databases who previously leaked out CPU-z screenshots of an alleged AMD Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" APU sample and now, they are following up with more information, this time showing the ES chip running in HWiNFO with all the information goodness. Do note that this is still based on an early APU sample so the final specifications are expected to change by the time of release.

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So beginning with the details, the AMD Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" lineup is expected to come in two configurations, a monolithic & a chiplet design. It's going to be the second implementation of a hybrid core approach that AMD kicked off with its client CPUs in the current Phoenix lineup. Just like the Zen 4 and Zen 4C hybrid layout, the Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" APUs will come in a Zen 5 and Zen 5C hybrid layout.

Image Source: Performance Databases

The AMD Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" monolithic APUs would carry a single CCD with dual CCX. One of these CCX's will feature a 4 core & 8 thread config based on the Zen 5 CPU cores while the other would feature an 8 core & 16 thread config based on the Zen 5C CPU cores. The Zen 5 CCX will feature the full 16 MB L3 cache while the Zen 5C CCX will feature an 8 MB L3 cache for a total of 24 MB L3 cache on the chip. The clock speeds for both CCX's is expected to remain the same but the Zen 5C cores will offer slightly better efficiency.

This specific ES SKU had an average clock speed of 2.12 GHz (0.888V) and is featured on the FP8 platform. HWiNFO isn't fully decked out to support the ES parts so some metrics may not be correct. The platform was running the LPDDR5-6400 memory in 32 GB configuration.

For the iGPU side, the AMD Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" APUs will be configured with the AMD RDNA 3.5 GPU cores with 8 WGP's (Work Group Processors) and a total of 16 Compute Units for up to 1024 stream processors. There is no evidence for the GPU clock speeds but for some reason, the memory is listed as 512 MB of GDDR6 which should be an error since this is an iGPU & shares memory resources with the CPU cores (LPDDR5/X).

Following are the main highlights of the AMD Ryzen 8000 "Strix Point" APU family:

AMD Ryzen APU "iGPU" Configurations:

APU FamilyCodenameGPU CodenameGPU Compute Units (Max)TFLOPs
Ryzen 2000Raven RidgeVega11 Compute Units1.76 TFLOPs
Ryzen 3000PicassoVega11 Compute Units1.97 TFLOPs
Ryzen 4000RenoirVega+8 Compute Units2.15 TFLOPs
Ryzen 5000CezanneVega+8 Compute Units2.04 TFLOPs
Ryzen 6000RembrandtRDNA 212 Compute Units3.40 TFLOPs
Ryzen 7000Phoenix PointRDNA 312 Compute Units8.30 TFLOPs
Ryzen AI 300Strix PointRDNA 3.516 Compute Units5.93 TFLOPs
Ryzen AI MAX 300Strix HaloRDNA 3.540 Compute Units14.85 TFLOPs
Ryzen AI 400Gorgon PointRDNA 3.516 Compute Units~8.50 TFLOPs
Ryzen AI MAX 400Gorgon HaloRDNA 3.540 Compute Units~15.00 TFLOPs
Ryzen AI 500Medusa PointRDNA 3.5+TBDTBD
Ryzen AI 500Medusa PremiumRDNA 5TBDTBD
Ryzen AI MAX 500Medusa HaloRDNA 5TBDTBD
Ryzen AI 600TBD PointRDNA 5TBDTBD
Ryzen AI MAX 600TBD HaloRDNA 5TBDTBD

The AMD Strix Point APUs are expected to arrive in 2024 which means they will be competing with Intel's Arrow Lake and the follow-up, Lunar Lake. Intel is also going to be implementing similar tech such as hybrid cores, chiplets, and increased graphics cores within its future disaggregated lineup so it will be a very interesting competition between the two adversaries, mainly within the mobile and laptop segment.

News Source: HXL (@9550pro)

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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