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AMD detail Ryzen 7000 CPUs with 5.5GHz clock speeds and 15% faster coresWill also introduce Smart Access Storage for faster load times

Will also introduce Smart Access Storage for faster load times

AMD CEO Dr Lisa Su standing on a stage, presenting the Ryzen 7000 CPU range.

AMD have spilled a bunch of new details about their upcoming Ryzen 7000 CPUs, which were firstteased at CES 2022back in January. This time, AMD CEO Dr Lisa Su used a Computex 2022 keynote to reveal more about the gaming-focused chips, which are getting a major overhaul following the Ryzen 5000 and Ryzen 6000 laptop processor series.

AMD at Computex 2022Watch on YouTube

AMD at Computex 2022

Cover image for YouTube video

On that note, no specific chips were named, dated or priced, though we already knew the first Ryzen 7000s will release this autumn. Besides their own tuned-up speed credentials, they’ll also bring DDR5 memory and PCIe 5.0 support to the Ryzen range for the first time, along with RDNA 2 integrated graphics as standard. I’ve never really missed onboard graphics on previous Ryzen generations - they’re designed to pair with dedicated graphics cards anyway - but I guess it’s handy if your main GPU suddenly dies or something.

The Ryzen 7000 family also finally retire Ryzen’s long-serving AM4 socket in favour of the new AM5 socket. AM4 coolers will remain compatible, though obviously you’ll need a new motherboard if you opt to upgrade. Three new mobo chipsets were also announced during the show: X670E, X670 and B650. X670E will fill the all-singing, all-dancing role for enthusiasts, with maximum overclocking headroom and support for all PCIe 5.0 devices possible. X670 is similar but limits PCIe 5.0 support to storage and graphics (which, to be fair, isn’t much of a limit for gaming systems). B650, lastly, will aim for “mainstream price points”, still supporting overclocking but keeping PCIe 5.0 functionality to storage only.

In other storage news, AMD also revealed an addition to its AMD Advantage suite of Smart utilities: little performance-boosting bonuses that are enabled when running both an AMD CPU and an AMD GPU. Smart Access Storage “supports”Microsoft DirectStorage, a soon-to-be-available bit of technical trickery that will help supported games dodge data transfer bottlenecks for faster load times. Smart Access Storage seems to only augment Microsoft’s system, not act as an alternative to it, but since DirectStorage is all about getting the SSD, graphics card and CPU to work together more efficiently, it makes sense that AMD could wrangle a way of enhancing how Ryzen and Radeon hardware works within it.

AMD Advantage features function on existing AMD parts, so you hopefully shouldn’t need a Ryzen 7000 CPU for Smart Access Storage once both are available. Though the new processor family is shaping up to be a fairly radical shake-up of the Ryzen line, even down to the funky new shape of the heat spreader. Of course, after the Intel’s own massive redesign of its12th Gen Alder Lakechips, AMD going for merely incremental changes would have been a disappointment.