Mysterious Ryzen Pro 7000G CPUs imply AMD's last-minute decision to change model numbers — Ryzen 3 Pro 7300G and Ryzen 5 Pro 7500G pose for the camera

AMD's Ryzen 5 7500G and Ryzen 3 7300G processors
(Image credit: Chiphell)

When AMD released its Ryzen 8000G and Ryzen Pro 8000G-series processors based on the Zen 4 microarchitecture earlier this year, it surprised many observers by not using the 7000 model range, which is already known for using the same Zen 4 technology. But if pictures of AMD's Ryzen 3 Pro 7300G and Ryzen 5 Pro 7500G published at Chiphell are to be believed, the red company planned to release its current-gen APUs with these model numbers at some point.

AMD's purported Ryzen 3 Pro 7300G and Ryzen 5 Pro 7500G have the same 100-000001187 and 100-000001183 OPNs as AMD's Ryzen 3 Pro 8300G and Ryzen 5 Pro 8500G processors, which suggests that the parts have the exact specifications. It indicates that AMD changed the model numbers of its Zen 4-based APUs to the Ryzen 8000G sequence after customers had developed and sampled them.

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(Image credit: Chiphell)

It is also possible that the red company decided to show that its higher-end Phoenix-based Ryzen 7 8700G/8700F, as well as Ryzen 5 8600G, feature considerably better built-in Radeon graphics (than Ryzen 7 7700 non-G and Ryzen 5 7600 non-G) and an AI engine.

Then again, essential Phoenix 2-based Ryzen 5 8500G/8400F and Ryzen 3 8300G feature lower clocks (as they use Zen 4c cores and full-fat Zen 4 cores) than their Raphael-based counterparts and lack an AI engine, which makes them a mediocre choice compared to mainstream Ryzen 7000-series non-G parts, despite higher model numbers.

It is not uncommon for AMD to change the model numbers of its processors just before release in a bid to show that its products are ahead of those from its arch-rival Intel. Recently, the company changed the branding of its Ryzen AI 100 or 200-series 'Strix Point' processors to Ryzen AI 300-series CPUs to leapfrog Intel's upcoming Core Ultra 2-series 'Lunar Lake' products.

Anton Shilov
Contributing Writer
  • usertests
    AMD has had some weird naming decisions over the years and has skipped to the next number too fast. So now we're at the precipice of a decision point: Do they go to Ryzen 10xx0 for Zen 6?
    Reply
  • Giroro
    usertests said:
    AMD has had some weird naming decisions over the years and has skipped to the next number too fast. So now we're at the precipice of a decision point: Do they go to Ryzen 10xx0 for Zen 6?
    Zen 6 might be one of those cases where AMD just copies Intel's naming verbatim, for no reason. Like they do with their chipsets, and partly with the "3/5/7/9" tiers of their CPUs. And then later they'll confusingly rename their GPUs to be identical to their CPUs again, for no good reason.

    So maybe in a year or two you'll be deciding between a Ryzen 7 Ultimate 365X3D or a Core Ultra 7 365KF to pair with your RX 365 XT.

    We live in the end of days.
    Reply