AMD's small Radeon RX7000M and RX7000S mobile GPU series based on the latest RDNA3 graphics architecture have only five SKUs, covering "Navi31" and "Navi33" chips. The RX7000M series only has the "Navi31"-based RX7900M enthusiast-level series and the "Navi33"-based RX7600M series, thus leaving a huge gap.
AMD plans to fill the gap with the RX7800M series and RX7700M series SKUs based on "Navi32" (internally known as "CuarzoVerde"). The GPU can be soldered to gaming notebook motherboards, but AMD will also provide reference design MXM modules to OEMs, which were spotted in public shipping list harukaze5719 on Twitter.
The "Navi32" package is roughly similar in size to the compact "Navi31" package used in the RX7900M series. Compared to the "Navi31" GCD's 96 compute units, the "Navi32" GCD's 5nm GCD is physically smaller, with only 60 compute units, surrounded by four 6nm MCDs that provide 64MB of cache and a 256-bit GDDR6 memory bus.
With it, AMD can not only launch the RX7800M series and RX7700M series SKUs, but also launch the RX7900S series SKUs in the field of gaming-grade ultra-portable products. In the first quarter of 2024, in addition to some new desktop SKUs, we will also see the release of some related products.