A possible AMD Ryzen 4000 Renoir desktop APU has been spotted on the 3DMark 11 benchmark. The processor, which was in a system that utilized a yet to be released Gigabyte B550 Aorus Pro motherboard, managed an overall score of 5,659 points. This left it lagging behind laptop APUs such as the Ryzen 7 4700U and the Ryzen 7 4800U.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/First-AMD-Ryzen-4000-Renoir-desktop-APU-appears-on-3DMark-11-but-offers-lower-scores-than-the-Ryzen-7-4700U-and-Ryzen-7-4800U-mobile-APUs.457368.0.html
4200g maybe? The results seem about right.
Testing an APU with 2133MT/s DDR4 will bottleneck it massively when the comparison is 4266MT/s LPDDR4X-equipped laptops. That is literally half the memory bandwidth.
Right! R3 4200G vs R7 4700H with that value is an excellent comparison.
Is hopefull specially for R7 4600G :D
But I'll wait for 5nm EUV R9. Now I get 8600B APU and I love it <3
If this is the 4200G, then it looks like a massive step up from the 3200G
The title is too negative for a lower end desktop APUs. Of course it would score below the 4700U, but what would you expect for a 4-core desktop APU?
Not to mention that the APU would be the monolithic one (IIRC) instead of chiplet-based.
Quote from: Anon on March 14, 2020, 00:01:10
The title is too negative for a lower end desktop APUs. Of course it would score below the 4700U, but what would you expect for a 4-core desktop APU?
Not to mention that the APU would be the monolithic one (IIRC) instead of chiplet-based.
Renoir is only one die which is used both for mobile and desktop APUs. Dr. Su confirmed back when Ryzen 3000 launched that there would be no GPU chiplets for this generation. Have to wait at least until next year for that.
An for this being low end... I'm not so sure. CPU performance doesn't look like a low end chip. I would guess this is midrange or high end but hobbled by terrible RAM.