Leak suggests huge performance leap for AMD's Zen 5 Ryzen 8000 series CPUs

It looks like AMD's Zen 5 CPUs will deliver impressive IPC gains

Leak suggests huge performance leap for AMD's Zen 5 Ryzen 8000 series CPUs

AMD's Zen 5 CPUs are expected to deliver huge single-threaded and multi-threaded performance gains over Zen 4

AMD are preparing to launch their next-generation Zen 5 processors in 2024, replacing their Ryzen 7000 series with newer Ryzen 8000 series models. According to Red Gaming Tech, AMD will not be increasing their CPU core counts their Ryzen 8000 series, with the company's generational performance leaps coming from architectural changes and not increased core/thread counts. 

If this leaked information is true, AMD are hoping to deliver significant single-threaded performance gains with Zen 5, gains that will translate to both single-threaded and multi-threaded performance boosts. These performance gains will reportedly come from architectural changes, not clock speed gains, as AMD does not expect their Zen 5 processors to clock much higher than their Zen 4 counterparts.

In his latest video, Red Gaming Tech has released Cinebench R23 scores for Zen 5 engineering samples, which have been rounded to the nearest 1,000 points to help hide the source of these leaked scores. These scores are significantly higher than the scores that are achievable by AMD's Ryzen 7000 series processor, and the scores of retail Ryzen 8000 series hardware could be higher, as these results were reportedly achieved on early silicon. 

Single-threaded Cinebench R23 scores for Zen 5 are said to be in the mid-high 2000s. Today's high-end Ryzen 7000 series processors can achieve single-threaded scores in this benchmark of close to 2,100 points, suggesting that AMD has achieved single-threaded performance gains of over 25% in Cinebench R23 with their Ryzen 8000 series processors. 

In terms of multi-threaded performance, AMD's Ryzen 9 7950X can achieve scores of around 39,000 points in Cinebench R23, making a score of around 49,000 points for a 16-core Zen 4 processor around 25% faster. These are strong performance gains for AMD, though it remains unclear if these performance gain will translate well to other workloads.

Red Gaming Tech has stated that his sources have claimed that the move from Zen 4 to Zen 5 will be "a bigger improvement than Zen 2 to 3", which is a big claim given how large the performance leap offered by Zen 3 was. 

Leaked Zen 5 Cinebench R23 Scores (Rounded to the nearest 1,000 points)

- 16-core - 49,000 points

- 12-core - 36,000 points

- 8-core - 23,000 points

- 6-core - 17,000 points

- Single-Thread results are in the mid-high 2,000s

Leak suggests huge performance leap for AMD's Zen 5 Ryzen 8000 series CPUs

With Zen 4, AMD clearly focused on increasing the clock speeds that their Zen architecture, transitioning to DDR5 memory, and adding support for the AVX-512 instruction set. When moving to Zen 5, it is clear that AMD are moving to increase the IPC (instructions per cycle/clock) of their processors to deliver performance gains with their next-generation designs, which means that the performance gains offered by Zen 5 could vary significantly on a workload-to-workload basis. Some of the architectural changes that AMD will make with Zen 5 will be incredibly effective in some workloads and less effective in others, which is something that should make Zen 5 a huge upgrade for some users and a smaller upgrade for others.

If these rumours are true, AMD's Zen 5 architecture will be a big step forward for AMD, though it remains to be seen if AMD's architectural changes will be big enough, or wide reaching enough to deliver large performance gains in all workloads. AMD's Ryzen 7000 series CPUs should be very interesting to test for this very reason, and we look forward to reviewing these CPUs when the time comes.

You can join the discussion on AMD's Zen 5 CPU performance leaks on the OC3D Forums.  

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Most Recent Comments

10-08-2023, 00:32:09

Digikid
I just want lower power usage and lower heat.Quote

10-08-2023, 06:32:08

VladyCzech
Quote:
Originally Posted by Digikid View Post
I just want lower power usage and lower heat.
Just use your cellphone for low power usage and lower heat. All others want POWAAA!

Seriously, AMD has the best power/performance ratio and that will not change. If you really need to lower your CPU power consumption, just buy entry level CPU, not high end.

High end is not for everyone (surely not for those who save $ on electricity). I personally do not care about power consumption of my CPU, when my GPU is 5x more power hungry in 4k gaming and I do not care about that either

Live is about choices and priorities, right?Quote

10-08-2023, 06:46:39

FTLN
Quote:
Originally Posted by VladyCzech View Post
Just use your cellphone for low power usage and lower heat. All others want POWAAA!

Seriously, AMD has the best power/performance ratio and that will not change. If you really need to lower your CPU power consumption, just buy entry level CPU, not high end.

High end is not for everyone (surely not for those who save $ on electricity). I personally do not care about power consumption of my CPU, when my GPU is 5x more power hungry in 4k gaming and I do not care about that either

Live is about choices and priorities, right?
+ In agreement, you only live once, give us the power

Actually I would like a 16 core with 3DvCache stacked on both CCD or even a 32 core with quad ccd but not sure if the socket could handle that..Quote

11-08-2023, 10:01:00

Meaker
Quote:
Originally Posted by FTLN View Post
+ In agreement, you only live once, give us the power

Actually I would like a 16 core with 3DvCache stacked on both CCD or even a 32 core with quad ccd but not sure if the socket could handle that..
Its the io chip that can't handle that

Quote:
Originally Posted by Digikid View Post
I just want lower power usage and lower heat.
Just set a lower power target.Quote

11-08-2023, 17:19:11

Warchild
Id take lower heat and more efficiency over unnecessary power any day. Electric bills are nuts.Quote
Reply
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