Summary

AMDhas announced another wave of its next-generation Ryzen 8000 Series of CPUs. The newly revealed lineup comprises 16AMDRyzen Pro processors in total, evenly divided between desktop and mobile CPUs.

A small portion of the newly debuted series has already been showcased over the preceding months, starting with the latest edition of CES in January 2024. Since then,AMD has released two Ryzen 8000 Series CPUs, the Ryzen 7 8700F and Ryzen 5 8400F, both of which hit the market at the beginning of April.

AMD Ryzen AI Pro chipset render 3 Hawk Point Ryzen PRO AI_01_0002_4K_alpha

Two weeks later, the company is now launching 16 new next-gen processors meant to extend its 2024 offerings. The entire lineup is based on the Zen 4AMD microarchitecture, which the tech giant touts as the template for the world’s most performant x86 processors. Based on a 4nm process node, the series promises to deliver major power efficiency improvements compared to AMD’s Ryzen 7000 Series CPUs, which are based on a 5nm lithography process. The product range also boasts cutting-edge connectivity features, including support for Bluetooth 5.4 and Wi-Fi 7. The latter standard has only been adopted in 2024 and is still far from widespread, but is expected to gain more market share over the coming years.

Ryzen 9 Pro 8945HS

AMD LOQ 15-1

8

16

4.0 GHz

5.2 GHz

24 MB

Ryzen 7 Pro 8845HS

3.8 GHz

5.1 GHz

Ryzen 7 Pro 8840HS

3.3 GHz

Ryzen 5 Pro 8645HS

6

12

4.3 GHz

5.0 GHz

22 MB

Ryzen 5 Pro 8640HS

3.5 GHz

4.9 GHz

Ryzen 5 Pro 8540U

3.2 GHz

Half of the newly introduced offerings comprise the AMD Ryzen Pro 8040 Series processors, a lineup catering to gaming laptops and portable workstations. As with allAMD Ryzen mobile CPUs, this series seeks to balance high-end processing capabilities with efficient power consumption, boasting a thermal design power as low as 15 watts. The letters at the end of any given CPU’s model number denote its intended form factor. E.g., the “HS” label identifies processors geared toward gaming and multimedia editing CPUs, whereas those ending with “U” have been designed for ultrathin notebooks and are hence maximally energy-efficient.

4.2 GHz

Ryzen 7 Pro 8700GE

3.65 GHz

4.35 GHz

Ryzen 5 Pro 8600GE

3.9 GHz

3.55 GHz

Ryzen 5 Pro 8500GE

3.40 GHz

4

3.45 GHz

12 MB

Ryzen 3 Pro 8300GE

35 W

The Ryzen Pro 8000 Series processors account for the second half of AMD’s newly debuted lineup. These CPUs are exclusively catering tohigh-end desktop PCs. Both them and their mobile counterparts are touted as offering native support for artificial intelligence-infused workflows, including the ability to run generative AI applications locally. In terms of naming conventions, this generation of AMD CPUs once again uses the “G” and “GE” labels to differentiate between processors aimed at consumers and OEMs, respectively. The OEM variants of the CPUs are generally more energy efficient by virtue of having lower base clock speeds and some other minor tweaks. Both, however, should offer comparable performance in terms of the end user experience.

AMD hasn’t yet attached any MSRPs to its newly announced Ryzen 8000 Series processors. The new CPU models are expected to start appearing in laptops and prebuilt PCs in the coming months.

AMD LOQ 15"

Speed meets endurance with the AMD LOQ 15" gaming laptop. Offering top performance without compromising battery life, this laptop runs incredibly fast thanks to its NVIDIA GeForce RTX GPU. Plus, this PC comes with 3 months of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. The Lenovo AI Engine+ pairs with the cutting-edge Lenovo LA1 AI Chip, to further optimize the system with smart, fine-tuned sensors. There’s also a dedicated MUX Switch with NVIDIA Advanced Optimus that automatically cuts latency, optimizes battery life, and boosts FPS.