Intel and AMD rumors suggest underwhelming CPU plans for 2023
Raptor Lake refresh doesn’t sound hugely compelling, and AMD looks like it’ll top out at 8-cores with 3D V-Cache
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Next year, the battle of the desktopprocessorswill continue to be fought between Raptor Lake – withIntelplanning a refreshed clutch of current 13th-gen chips – andAMD’s Zen 4, according to the latest rumors from a well-known Chinese leaker.
However, we will see at least some new silicon pretty early in 2023, when we can expect to be treated to a newRaptor Lakeflagship, the 13900KS, a CPU that Intel has already been talking up ashitting 6GHz boost speeds out of the box– quite an eye-opening feat.
AMD’s reply to that, according to ECSM (onBilibili, viaVideoCardz), will be new 3D V-Cache versions of Ryzen 7000 processors – but these will not go above 8-core models, apparently. ECSM reckons that 6-core and 8-core X3D spins on Zen 4 chips are inbound, but nothing else is planned, and no beefier processor with 3D V-Cache (or at least that hasn’t been spotted yet).
We will supposedly see the 13900KS, and what’ll likely be the Ryzen 5 7600X3D and Ryzen 7 7700X3D, in the middle of, or later on in, H1 2023. So presumably we’re looking at April to June, or thereabouts, for the new chips to actually be on sale (a reveal could come considerably earlier, presumably).
Apparently later in the third quarter of 2023 (September or thereabouts), Intel is planning on a Raptor Lake refresh, taking the main processors from the current line-up and cranking clock speeds by 100MHz to 200MHz.
So, this will just be a matter of small incremental bumps, and the main specs, core counts and such, of these new processors will remain the same as the current 13th-gen models.
Apparently Intel’s next-gen CPUs – Meteor Lake and Arrow Lake – will not be debuting next year at all, and will instead be out in 2024. We were still expecting Meteor Lake would turn up in 2023, though not according to ECSM; but elsewhere in the rumor mill, this is still being held as a possibility. Add large amounts of seasoning with this, naturally, and the other info imparted by the leaker here.
Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.
Sign up to be the first to know about unmissable Black Friday deals on top tech, plus get all your favorite TechRadar content.
Analysis: Nothing much doing for 2023, then?
Essentially, Intel isn’t going to do much next year – assuming ECSM is on the money with these fresh rumors, of course – and neither will AMD for that matter. We’ll get what sounds like a very minor refresh of Raptor Lake silicon, but Meteor Lake and Arrow Lake are still a long way off. As is Zen 5 for that matter, but we knew that was the case – it’s Intel’s apparently changed plans which are the bigger surprise here.
That said, many folks were expecting to see a beefy X3D variant from AMD, so it’s something of a surprise to learn that we may not get that. At least not to begin with anyway, though in fairness, an 8-core3D V-Cachemodel (likely 7700X3D) is what’s going to be interesting from a mainstream gaming standpoint anyway. That’s the Ryzen chip a lot of folks are expecting to be the big-punching processor which causes Intel trouble in 2023.
Supposedly, Intel’s Meteor Lake will be configured with a top-end chip that has 6 performance cores and 16 efficiency cores, so with no high-end desktop CPU version in other words (with other speculation indicating the range may be more focused on mobile chips). The 8 performance cores for the top desktop models (Core i7, i9) are expected to be brought in with Arrow Lake, hence why both of these are now landing in 2024, covering different ends of the performance spectrum. Both Meteor and Arrow Lake will require a new socket and platform, andshould be going up against Zen 5 in 2024.
Meantime, though, it’s sounding very much like a quiet year on the processor front for 2023…
Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - ‘I Know What You Did Last Supper’ - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).
Trying to get the AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D CPU? It seems only scalpers have it and they’re jacking up the price
As if Intel didn’t have enough to worry about, Nvidia might be about to jump into the PC processor market
NYT Strands today — hints, answers and spangram for Sunday, November 10 (game #252)