Before AMD came roaring back to desktop competitiveness with its Ryzen 1000 CPU family, AMD's APUs with integrated graphics were well received, delivering very competitive integrated graphics performance—despite their decidedly average Bulldozer based CPU cores. AM4 saw its fair share of APUs, topped by the Ryzen 7 5700G, but AM5 models with genuine graphical capabilities have been missing in action. Apparently that's no longer the case, as AMD is reportedly preparing APUs with capable RDNA 3 integrated graphics.
According to a Google Doc maintained by Reous at the HardwareLuxx forums (via @9550pro and Videocardz), the latest AMD AGESA 1.0.8.0 firmware includes support for an as-yet-unannounced family based upon the AMD Phoenix architecture. The logical name for this family would be the Ryzen 7000G series.
Furthermore, Asus has released a new BIOS for its EX-B650M-V7 motherboard with the 1.0.8.0 firmware, which includes support for «upcoming CPU». It's only a matter of time before this update is incorporated into more AM5 BIOS' from Asus and other vendors.
Phoenix APUs are currently found in AMD laptops. The Ryzen 9 7940HS is the top model in its range. It comes with 8-cores, 16MB of L3 cache and Radeon 780M integrated graphics with 12 CUs (or 768 stream processors). That's six times the 2 CU RDNA 2 count of Zen 4 based Ryzen 7000-series CPUs. Needless to say, the graphics performance of an AM5 Phoenix chip will blow away the ageing Vega based integrated graphics of Ryzen 5000G APUs and anything Intel's Raptor Lake has to offer. Meteor Lake's integrated graphics may yet put up a fight, though only in NUC or embedded form.
Cheaper models with fewer CUs are distinct possibilities too, but they'll need to be as aggressively
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