Monday, April 12th 2021
AMD Ryzen 7 5700G APU Pictured and Tested
We have received various leaks and benchmarks for AMD's upcoming Ryzen 5000G processors, these were all from engineering samples but we now have our first look at the retail 5700G. The AMD Ryzen 7 5700G features the model number 100-000000263 attributed to earlier rumors and has been tested in CPU-Z scoring 631 points in single-threaded performance along with 6782 points in multi-threaded, and in Cinebench R20 it scored 6040 points. The integrated Vega graphics lack any official drivers but GPU-Z reports a Vega 8 processor with 12 Streaming Multiprocessors and a base clock of 2 GHz. AMD is yet to officially announce any Ryzen 5000G processors so it is unclear how far away their launch is and whether or not they will be made available to the DIY market.
Source:
Chiphell
54 Comments on AMD Ryzen 7 5700G APU Pictured and Tested
DDR5 won't help jack shit if AMD continues to saddle these otherwise excellent APUs with Vega 8 (even lower clocked Vega 7 for the 6-core, even worse). If you know what you're doing, you're already going to be running 4000-4400 B-die on these APUs, but it won't actually tangibly help your performance beyond about 3800CL16. Maybe if you only run JEDEC 2133. You can take the memory higher all you want, you can try to OC the iGPU further all you want, Vega 8 isn't going to go anywhere meaningful.
It's like calling for GDDR6X on a GT 1030. Granted, the DDR4 version was über bad, but it literally ran at half the bus width of a normal DDR4-2133 system.
The POS Vega iGPU is too small and too old to ever be of any use. AMD can go on and on about how Vega 8 makes up the difference in clocks, but the performance shows. I can understand the need to keep die size small to mitigate the consequences of their unfortunate decision to put all their products in the same TSMC N7 basket, but still being stuck on Vega in 2021 is just lmao. Or alright, Vega with a die shrink and some new encoding features.
Like, either give us back 7nm Vega 11, or move to RDNA. I don't see why the latter is so hard to do.
I'd wait for the actual benchmarks to say it is exactly the same. There will be a boost in the performance but it is still Vega graphics anyway.
No one's asking for a 5700XT here. All we want is a badly needed newer arch on the same number of CUs, or a larger core to get back to where we were + some higher 7nm clocks. If we weren't in the middle of a (partially self-inflicted) N7 supply shortage, there'd be no excuse afforded to AMD for this shit, "hey we took away some of your CUs which we justified by giving you more cores, but have some more clockspeed to level the playing field......sorta...kinda...not really......and now we're going for round 2!"
On serious side, I don't expect any major architectural changes to the APU. Intel is prime example, they have a very good performance XE inside their Tiger Lake, and yet we only got ancient UHD on the desktop CPU. 20 bucks they will come in bundle.
And no, they're not CPU-bound in the slightest. One of them is 60-fps hardcoded and how it behaves on my 5900X, now *that's* CPU bound.
Starting to sound like a broken record, but while it's a given that 2133 to 3600 is going to be a huge difference, up where the IF limit of these new APUs actually lies it really appears that AMD needs to either give back our CUs or give us RDNA.
I do understand the disappointment as I am looking forward to RDNA2 iGPU too. But if it is not ready, its not ready. I believe AMD have made a calculated decision on not bringing in RDNA2. So we just gotta wait.
AMD's only objective for Cezanne was to gain mobile marketshare. The Zen 3 cores will do that when paired with RTX 30 mobile. Result? Renoir + Zen 3.
Renoir was pretty reasonably priced, grey market non-warranty notwithstanding. I wonder if this gen whether retail or grey market will see APUs being introduced to scalpers for the first time. I hope not.
No A320 support Zen 3, only B450 and up.