Monday, June 20th 2022
AMD Reportedly Preparing Next Generation Steam Deck Processor
AMD is allegedly preparing an upgraded quad-core APU with Zen 4 and RDNA3 architectures for a next-generation Steam Deck device according to Moore's Law is Dead. The report claims that the chip is referred to as a "Van Gogh Successor" internally with a die size between 110 mm² and 150 mm² resulting in an increased production cost. The chip should feature 4 Zen 4 cores and 8 threads offering 25% - 35% higher performance per clock (PPC) with a maximum boost of 4 GHz. The RDNA3 graphics will include 8 Compute Units with significantly higher PPC compared to their RDNA2 counterparts which combined with the updated CPU could see a performance improvement up to 50%. These rumors have not been confirmed with any potential Steam Deck processor far from being announced or released anytime soon.Video
Source:
Moore’s Law is Dead
29 Comments on AMD Reportedly Preparing Next Generation Steam Deck Processor
The thing is, how long AMD will continue to produce it? Does it make sense to continue to use it or they could just upgrade the next SteamDeck to a newer chip that is also shared with laptop/Chromebook or other portable gaming device.
Valve went to AMD and said, do you have a chip for our usage and they said, we have this chip that we designed for Microsoft and they just ditched us, want it? Unlike Sony and Microsoft, they did not invested money into having this chip tailored for their solutions.
They would probably have better cost (or AMD better margin) if they switch to a chip that is used on way more than just the steamdeck.
The issue with Valve has always been their hardware. Steam Machines? Interesting concept but crashed and burned. Steam Link? Was actually pretty good but then abandoned. Steam Controller, dead as well. Valve seems to come out with good ideas and then abandon them shortly after in the hopes that someone else picks them up and runs with it.
The Index also exists, and is considered one of the best VR headsets.
Their hardware had for the most part what I would call a decent run, and their software support for that hardware is pretty good.
I also agree with konga, with the time lag for designing and releasing portable hardware, they absolutely need to pick something *now* so the cooling/power/design layout can be finalised ASAP, and zen4 APU's fit their requirements really well
In this case, early adopters got their units first, and could theoretically be given a discount towards the SD2, while those still in line could be given the option for a free upgrade to the SD2 version of their reservation; price locking it for them at the cost of the old one. All in exchange for giving up one's place in line to head back, but one of the first in line for the SD2 version of their original choice (Basic, Middle, and Top-end) at a much cheaper cost.
Now I'm not saying it will happen either, but after following some development/refinement on the fly from various successful fundraisers, it's one option Valve could do. Their main goal is to get SteamDecks into as many hands as possible, further helping to cement control over the game libraries since most will not attempt to hack Windows onto it, and instead just use Steam OS and buy whatever is on Steam that they enjoy. It's about getting even more people into their ecosystem and buying into it. So if financials look better for them to just move on to SD2 because the parts are ready, they could do so. Moreso as they're not as beholden to game studios as the legacy console makers; who use more proprietary hardware elements than the SteamDeck and have to give them more time to fully optimize for each console.
It's just that these types of decisions need to be taken years in advance.
New version of laptops are released all the time, so I dont see why the steam deck could be that different. Maybe it wont be upgraded every year, but perhaps every couple years.
The only thing I am not sure is how much support will be needed to make everything work on a steam deck. Obviously valve has done a lot of work getting steam games to work on the deck. If they have to do all that work over again everything they release a new steam deck, then we may see a longer cadence similar to console releases. But if it is as simple as dropping in a new chip and adding a few features, then it could be interesting.
Renoir laptops were about 7-8 months from the official announcement to being a product you could get your hands on in the real world, so using that as an example this could be over a year away still.
(Bonus points for those that get that reference)