AMD's Ryzen Z1, the all-in-one processor that powers the Asus ROG Ally and Ally X, and the Lenovo Legion Go, has been confirmed to be replaced with an updated sequel. Officially called the Ryzen Z2, the semi-custom chip won't appear until next year and it's hoped that more vendors will use it than the original Z1.
Even if you only have a casual interest in handheld gaming PCs, you surely will have noticed that when it comes to the chip that powers the device, almost every vendor goes with an AMD Ryzen APU. The Steam Deck uses a custom chip, designed specifically for that handheld, but most handhelds use something like the Ryzen 7 7840U.
The aforementioned devices from Asus and Lenovo, though, use a customised version of that APU, called the Ryzen Z1 or the much better Z1 Extreme. I say custom but it's really the same processor, just with a different TDP (15 W in the case of the Z1 Extreme, 28 W for the 7840U). Oh, and the AI part of the chip is disabled too.
With such few differences, it's not hard to see why so many handheld gaming PC vendors have chosen the standard 7840U and I assumed that this would become the norm for such devices. However, in an interview with PC World, AMD confirmed that a Ryzen Z2 was definitely in the works and the company expects that «it will be coming to market, probably in the early part of 2025.»
Unfortunately, PC World couldn't prise any further details out of AMD so we're just left to make some educated guesses as to what APU the Z2 will be based on. The most obvious choice is Strix Point, aka Ryzen AI 300—the likes of the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 has the same TDP as the 7840U so it's clearly a suitable fit for most handhelds.
While the Z1 Extreme sports eight Zen 4 CPU cores and 12 RDNA 3 compute units (CUs) for graphics, the HX 370 boasts four Zen 5 and eight Zen 5c CPU cores and 16 RDNA 3.5 CUs. Both chips have the same CPU boost clock of 5.1 GHz but the latter has a GPU boost clock of 2.9 GHz compared to the former's 2.7 GHz.
In short,
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