Skip to main content

AMD shows Zen processors can play ‘Doom’ just fine

AMD might not be looking to release its Zen processors until early 2017, but the silicon is fully functioning as the red company showcased in one of its more recent videos, wherein one of its staffers plays Doom. Ignoring the fact that he’s not the greatest player in the world, and that AMD didn’t say with what graphics card the processor was running in tandem, it’s good to see it’s capable of handling AAA games.

Although, of course, you would expect it to. AMD has been talking up how much more powerful this next-generation of chip is, handling as much as “40 percent” more instructions per cycle than the previous Excavator cores within its current generation of CPUs.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

But from AMD’s video, it’s really hard to tell how much of a difference that makes. The game looks to be running at reasonably high specifications and at a smooth frame rate, but in a compressed YouTube video it’s impossible to tell. We’re also not given any details on what detail settings the game is running on or what graphics processor (GPU) it has doing the grunt work.

Without that, all we can really do is say that Zen is far along enough in the production line that it’s capable of playing commercial software in a competent fashion.

Regardless, though, it’s good that AMD is rigorously testing its new line of potentially top-of-the-line processors, as we want them to be good and ready when it’s time to officially release them next year. In an ideal world they debut and compete directly with Intel in some segment of the upper market, giving that firm a good reason to step up its game in turn.

2016 has been a big year for AMD. If it can have a solid launch with its Polaris GPUs, that will set it up nicely for a good showing of Zen in a few months’ time. This time next year we could be looking at a very different AMD than we see today.

Its staff probably still won’t be any better at Doom though.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
AMD is giving up on Windows 10
AMD's CEO delivering the Computex 2024 presentation.

It's official: AMD's Ryzen AI processors will not support Windows 10. With a neural processing unit (NPU) that reaches up to 50 trillion operations per second (TOPS), the Ryzen AI lineup is more than ready for the future -- so it makes sense that it'd also leave the past in the rearview mirror. As a result, today's findings are just a confirmation of previous rumors. But is this decision a big deal, and will it stretch toward other Zen 5 processors?

Microsoft's Copilot+ sparked a revolution that left AMD and Intel scrambling to release new CPUs that are capable of meeting the 40 TOPS requirement, so it's really no surprise that the laptops built around the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 and the Ryzen AI 9 365 will not support Windows 10. The chips were built for AI, and all of the latest developments in that area are in Windows 11. In fact, the Ryzen AI 300 series only supports Windows 11 64-bit and Ubuntu. This information comes straight from the source, as can be seen on the AMD product page.

Read more
AMD Zen 5: Everything we know about AMD’s next-gen CPUs
The AMD Ryzen 5 8600G APU installed in a motherboard.

AMD Zen 5 is the next-generation Ryzen CPU architecture for Team Red. And after a major showing at Computex 2024, it's ready for a July launch. AMD promises major performance advantages for the new architecture that will give it a big leap in performance in gaming and productivity tasks, and the company also claims it will have major leads over Intel's top 14th-generation alternatives.

We'll need to wait for the release to know for sure how these chips perform, but here's what we know about Zen 5 so far.
Zen 5 release date and availability
AMD confirmed in January 2024 that it was on track to launch Zen 5 sometime in the "second half of the year," and backed that up at its Computex 2024 showing, where it promised the first four chips from the Ryzen 9000 generation will launch in July. That will be the Ryzen 9 9950X, the Ryzen 9 9900X, Ryzen 7 9700X, and Ryzen 5 9600X. Additional non-X and X3D variants are expected in the months that follow.

Read more
AMD just won the AI arms race
An Asus ProArt laptop on a surface against a desert background.

TOPS -- also known as trillions of operations per second.

The acronym has quickly become the go-to measurement for expressing the AI horsepower of a system, and the biggest tech companies in the world are duking it out to outdo each other.

Read more