In what way do you consider Zen 5 a flop? AMD is absolutely going to use N3P for Zen 6 from what I hear. Not sure about x3D, but considering that it only helps in part of the market, I am not sure I agree.You do realize Zen 5 was a complete flop? It took the x3D chips to save it. On the server side, excellent. On the PC side, awful release. AMD should use N3P for Zen 6 and make the x3D chips standard. AMD should consider releasing a Zen 5+ on 3nm mid 2025. N3P for Zen 6 and Zen 7 would be the play for AMD.
There is no reason for AMD to release another Zen 5 variant IMO. Better to wait on N3P and N2 for higher transistor density and actually add some IPC and cores to the mix.
AMD has continued to gain market share in desktop and server with Zen 5. Seems like a pretty successful product to me.... and they are doing it on a less expensive, less dense node that Intel's Arrow Lake.Intel wishes it had a complete flop that profitable.
Up to 18 cores (6P 8E and 4LPE). Seems like it would be pretty potent to me. Of course, without SMT, you are looking at 18 cores and 18 threads vs 16 cores and 32 threads (halo) and 12 cores and 24 threads for Strix Point. Considering the use of BSPDN on 18A, the actual transistor count could be significantly increased over Intel's current generation giving them the opportunity for some serious IPC uplift .... so I am not sure I agree with your assessment.Last time I saw Panther Lake is still behind Strix Point especially in MT, maybe close to double digit at last. ST might be a tie.