AMD Ryzen 5000G APU specs and details just leaked online, and they're still based on Vega GPUs

AMD Ryzen 9 5950X
AMD Ryzen 9 5950X (Image credit: Rich Edmonds / Windows Central)

What you need to know

  • Details about AMD's Ryzen 5000G-series desktop APUs have leaked online.
  • The APUs are likely based on AMD's Zen 3 architecture.
  • The Ryzen 5000G series appears to use AMD's integrated Vega GPU cores.

Details about AMD's Ryzen 5000G-series desktop APUs appear to have leaked online. The leaks come from Twitter user "momomo_us" and show off three different Ryzen APUs. Based on the leaks, the new APUs are based on AMD's Zen 3 architecture and use AMD's integrated Vega GPU cores.

AMD launched its Ryzen 5000-series CPUs last fall, and also has several Ryzen 5000 Mobile processors available. The leaked Ryzen 5000G-series APUs would round out this current generation.

Here are the leaked specs, which should be taken with a grain of salt.

Swipe to scroll horizontally
ProcessorCoresBase ClockBoost ClockL3 cache
Ryzen 7 5700G83.8GHz4.6GHz16MB
Ryzen 5 5600G63.9GHz4.4GHz16MB
Ryzen 3 5300G44.0GHz4.2GHz8MB

As Neowin highlights, the Ryzen 5000G APUs are likely based on AMD's Zen 3 architecture. The lineup also likely utilizes AMD's integrated Vega GPU cores, which appear to top out at 8 cores.

Some will be disappointed to see that these APUs utilize AMD's Vega technology, rather than moving to the company's RDNA 2 architecture. While the Vega technology is older at this point, these APUs should be able to power the best PC games.

RDNA is a substantial upgrade over Vega (GCN - Graphics Core Next), allowing AMD to extract more performance out of the processor and allow for ray tracing and other new features. This architecture is what produced the RX 5000 series of GPUs. RDNA 2 came with Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5, as well as RX 6000 series GPUs. RDNA 3 is expected sometime later this year, pushing it even further, so we'd like to see RDNA hitting APUs in the not-so-distant future.

Sean Endicott
News Writer and apps editor

Sean Endicott is a tech journalist at Windows Central, specializing in Windows, Microsoft software, AI, and PCs. He's covered major launches, from Windows 10 and 11 to the rise of AI tools like ChatGPT. Sean's journey began with the Lumia 740, leading to strong ties with app developers. Outside writing, he coaches American football, utilizing Microsoft services to manage his team. He studied broadcast journalism at Nottingham Trent University and is active on X @SeanEndicott_ and Threads @sean_endicott_.