AMD Unveils Next-Gen Ryzen, Epyc CPU Roadmaps; High-End Radeon GPU With Ray Tracing Launching This Year

The company wants to keep its momentum going in the consumer and data centre markets

Advertisement
By Jamshed Avari | Updated: 6 March 2020 21:37 IST
Highlights
  • Next-gen Epyc CPUs are expected to drive more data centre growth
  • The RDNA 2 architecture will support hardware ray tracing
  • AMD has won a contract to build the world's fastest supercomputer

AMD has made a number of announcements related to its research and development efforts, and has publicly disclosed brand new roadmap updates at its Financial Analyst Day event. While light on product-specific news, we now know a lot about how the next few generations of CPUs and GPUs will shape up, and how AMD plans to gain market share in the important enterprise and data centre markets. AMD has had a very good run over the past three years, mostly thanks to the brand new Zen CPU architecture which came after nearly a decade of struggling to be competitive. The company announced growing revenue, increased profitability, and significant market share gains.

Describing AMD's "multi-generational" graphics and compute roadmaps, CEO Dr Lisa Su outlined the company's corporate strategy and recapped successes across the client, cloud, gaming, and supercomputing spaces in recent years. AMD has so far shipped over 260 million Zen cores across its Ryzen, Threadripper, and Epyc processors since they debuted in 2017. For desktop users, new CPUs codenamed 'Vermeer' based on the Zen 3 architecture, will launch this year and in 2021, depending on market segment, as expected. 

The next generation of Epyc processors, based on the Zen 3 architecture and codenamed 'Milan', are expected to be launched in late 2020. AMD also announced that work on the subsequent Epyc 'Genoa' generation based on Zen 4 cores is progressing, and these CPUs are expected to be manufactured on a new 5nm process, to hit the market by 2022.

Advertisement

AMD's scalable Infinity Fabric interconnect, which has allowed for an efficient modular chiplet-based design, is now known as Infinity Architecture. The third generation will optimise coherent memory sharing between a CPU and GPU for improved performance as well as simplified software development. Future CPUs will be manufactured using a die stacking process that AMD is calling 'X3D' which could result in up to 10x increases in bandwidth density.

As for graphics, we can expect new high-performance flagship-grade graphics cards towards the end of 2020, based on the second-gen RDNA (Radeon DNA) architecture. AMD promises hardware-accelerated ray tracing as well as variable rate shading, as well as a 50 percent improvement in power efficiency.

This also sheds some light on what we can expect from Sony and Microsoft's next-gen game consoles, both based on semi-custom AMD CPUs and CPUs, and both expected to launch this year. With a common hardware and software ecosystem, game developers will be able to target PCs and consoles with less effort. AMD also disclosed that third-generation RDNA will succeed it in or near 2022. 

Advertisement

Alongside the RDNA architecture for consumer gaming graphics cards, AMD will introduce a new CDNA (Compute DNA) product line for data centre compute workloads. Products will launch this year and target machine learning applications in the near future, with exascale-class supercomputing applications on the roadmap for the future. This will allow the company to develop focused products for this important market, which can be deployed in conjunction with Epyc server CPUs.

Advertisement

That ties in with a recent announcement by AMD that it has a won a contract to supply a new supercomputer called El Capitan for the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory which will be more powerful than the world's current top 200 supercomputers combined. As the world's most powerful supercomputer, it will be the first to break the 2 Exaflop barrier. It will be based on future Zen 4-based Epyc 'Genoa' CPUs, Radeon Instinct GPUs, and the Infinity Architecture interconnect. It will be completed in early 2023.

 

Catch the latest from the Consumer Electronics Show on Gadgets 360, at our CES 2026 hub.

Further reading: AMD, Ryzen, RDNA, Epyc, Radeon
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Amazon Great Republic Day Sale: Top Deals on Smartwatches Under Rs. 10,000
  2. Amazon Great Republic Day Sale: Top Laptop Deals Under Rs. 40,000
  3. Top Deals on Phones Under Rs. 50,000 During Amazon's Republic Day Sale
  4. Top Deals on OnePlus Smartphones During the Amazon Great Republic Day Sale
  5. Here's How Much the Vivo X200T Could Cost in India: See Expected Specs
  6. Redmi Note 15 Pro, Note 15 Pro+ 5G Could Launch in India on This Date
  7. Amazon Great Republic Day Sale Is Live: Best Offers Today
  8. OnePlus 15T Launch Timeline, Chipset Details Leaked
  9. iPhone 18 Pro Series, iPhone Fold Could Launch With These Specifications
  10. Amazon Great Republic Day Sale: Top Deals on Premium Smartphones
  1. Hypothetical ‘Dark Stars’ Could Rewrite Early Cosmic History, Research Suggests
  2. Honor Magic 8 Pro Air Key Features Confirmed; Company Teases External Lens for Honor Magic 8 RSR Porsche Design
  3. Lava Blaze Duo 3 India Launch Date Announced; Colour Options Teased Ahead of Debut
  4. Resident Evil Requiem Gets New Leon Gameplay at Resident Evil Showcase
  5. After ChatGPT Translate, Google Releases Multiple Open-Source Translation Models
  6. Realme Buds Clip India Launch Timeline Confirmed: Expected Specifications, Features
  7. NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Might Have Spotted Hidden Supermassive Black Holes
  8. Tere Ishk Mein Reportedly Streams on OTT Soon: All You Need to Know About Dhanush and Kriti Sanon-Starrer
  9. Amazon Great Republic Day Sale: Top Laptop Deals Under Rs. 40,000
  10. OnePlus 15T Launch Timeline, Chipset Details Leaked: Expected Specifications, Features
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.