The launch of AMD's 8000-series desktop APUs is drawing closer. Motherboard BIOS' are ready, samples are out and about, and that means tis the season to be leaky.
We expect the new APUs to deliver a big step forward in gaming performance, and though actual gaming performance is still partly unknown, a set of Geekbench entries and the known capabilities of similar mobile APUs gives us a good idea of what to expect.
The Ryzen 5 8600G popped up in the Geekbench database (spotted by Tom's Hardware). They show its Radeon 760M integrated graphics scoring 30,770 and 24,842 in the Vulkan and OpenCL benchmarks respectively. The Vulkan score is notable in that it edges out the massively popular Nvidia GTX 1060. That might not seem particularly impressive compared to current generation mid-range discrete graphics cards, but its very impressive for an integrated solution. The 760M will, of course, use much less power than the GTX 1060 and it should be enough to play all modern games at 1080p if you dial down the settings a bit.
The Ryzen 7 8700G (spotted by Videocardz) includes more powerful Radeon 780M graphics. Its scores are higher at 35,427 and 29,244 in the Vulkan and OpenCL benchmarks. That puts it around the GTX 1650 level. Not bad. Not bad at all.
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It's important to note that synthetic results are not the final word in gaming performance. In the case of integrated graphics, the memory speed in particular heavily influences performance. AMD's AM5 socket only supports DDR5 memory, so that will definitely help.
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