AMD Zen 6 could deliver a full 32-core chiplet, with Zen 5c reportedly set to offer its own 16-core

Author: Unit 734 | Date: 2025.12.04

Snippets from well-known leakers are suggesting that 2024 is going to be an exciting year for CPU enthusiasts, as AMD's forthcoming Zen 5 and Zen 5c architectures look like they'll be pushing core counts to new records. The next series of EPYC server chips could even have as many as 192 cores, 384 threads in a single package.

That's according to the usual cohort of reliable leakers, InstLatX64, Kepler_L2, and Harukaze5719 (via Guru3D), who posted their claims on a Twitter thread. If some of the terms are a bit confusing, then let me explain—AMD's CPUs have multiple cores, all sharing a common slice of L3 cache, in a group called a CCX (Core CompleX). The chiplet that houses the CCX is called a CCD (Core Complex Die) and contains one or two CCXs, depending on the generation of architecture.

The first design to be set out like this, Zen 2, has two four-core CCXs per CCD. Desktop Ryzen models, such as the Ryzen 9 3950X, have two CCDs underneath the heat spreader, for a total of 16 cores, 32 threads. AMD's Zen 2 EPYC chips have up to four CCDs, for a maximum of 32 cores, 64 threads.

And now it looks like [[link]] AMD is going to push the core count limit even further, with EPYC models topping out at 12 CCDs for a staggering 192 cores, 384 threads. There's no sign that Zen 5 Ryzen chips will have more than 16 cores but you never know, as AMD may feel that it could steal some of Intel's thunder by offering a desktop CPU with more than 24 cores, the amount [[link]] in the Core i9 14900K.

Swipe to scroll horizontally
AMD Zen architectures
ArchitectureCores per CCXCCXs per CCDMax number of CCDsMax core / thread count
Zen 342864 / 128
Zen 481864 [[link]] / 128
Zen 4c828128 / 256
Zen 58116128 / 256
Zen 5c16112192 / 384
Zen 632?1?8?256 / 512?

Harukaze5719 and Kepler_L2 also claim that Zen 6, which is still in the development phase, will have up to 32 cores per CCD, as well as smaller eight-core and 16-core CCD variants.

Gaming PCs obviously don't need as many CPU cores as that, partly because the latest consoles all have eight-core, 16-thread processors, but mostly because games just don't lend themselves to being heavily multithreaded. You're better off using a CPU that has high clock speeds and a pile of low latency cache to speed things along, such as the excellent Ryzen 7 7800X3D.

Workstations and servers, though, are a different kettle of fish, and there are plenty of applications where you can throw as many cores and threads as you can them, and they'll still be wanting more. In terms of pure core count, AMD has Intel well and truly beat in the server market, as the largest Xeon processor you can buy (the Xeon Platinum 8592+) 'only' has 64 cores, 128 threads. AMD's EPYC 9754 breezes past those counts with 128 cores, 256 threads.

If Zen 5 and 5c are going to raise the bar again, then Intel could find itself losing more ground to AMD in the highly profitable data center industry. This year's Computex event is only a month away now, so it probably won't be long before AMD spills all the beans on its new designs.

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