3DMark Listings Spotted For AMD Ryzen PRO 4750G, 4650G, And 4350G APUs

It looks like AMD is putting out more processors that we previously expected. This time around, benchmarks have been spotted for the PRO segments. These benchmarks were found by _rogame and TUM_APISAK (no surprises there!) who have shown listings for these CPUs in the 3DMark database.

Have We Seen A Last Minute Name Change?

Originally, we knew of only three different Ryzen 4000 PRO APUs. These were anticipated to be the Ryzen 7 PRO 4700G, the Ryzen 5 PRO 4400G, and the Ryzen 3 PRO 4200G. However, it looks like some of the SKUs may have undergone a bit of a name change.

Information posted by Igor’s Lab mentions a rumor that AMD might be changing the naming scheme for most of the Ryzen 4000 Renoir processors. The Ryzen 7 PRO 4700G is now expected to become the Ryzen 7 PRO 4750G and the same goes for the other processors. The 4400G could become the 4650G and the 4200G could be known as the 4350G.

What Do The Leaks Show?

Overall, it seems that these probably won’t be the final versions of the APUs we’ll see come release, but they are close enough that they give us a decent idea of what we can expect. It’s been suggested that the GPU performance still needs more optimization, but the CPU performance is almost double from what we’ve seen in existing Ryzen 3000 desktop APUs.

The below image gives us a good idea of what we could expect on these three Ryzen PRO processors.

Also, the leaks shown from _rogame show the Ryzen 7 PRO 4750 running at stock clocks with the same processors also overclocked to 4.5 GHz. This image also shows that the graphics chips have been overclocked to a speed of 2.4 GHz. These overclocks result in a boost of around 12% in the physics and graphics benchmarks.

AMD Ryzen 4000 ‘Renoir’ Desktop APU Lineup

With the names of these APUs all seemingly figured out, let’s take a look at the current lineup of AMD’s Ryzen 4000 ‘Renoir’ desktop APUs.

APU NameCore TechnologyCores / ThreadsBase ClockBoost ClockMemoryGraphicsGraphics ClockTDP
AMD Ryzen 7 4700G7nm Zen 28/163.6 GHz4.45 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 8 / 512 SPs2100 MHz65 W
AMD Ryzen 5 4400G7nm Zen 26/123.7 GHz4.30 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 7 / 448 SPs1900 MHz65 W
AMD Ryzen 3 4300G7nm Zen 24/83.8 GHz4.10 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 6 / 384 SPs1700 MHz65 W
AMD Ryzen 7 4700GE7nm Zen 28/163.1 GHz4.35 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 8 / 512 SPs2000 MHz35 W
AMD Ryzen 5 4400GE7nm Zen 26/123.3 GHz4.25 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 7 / 448 SPs1900 MHz35 W
AMD Ryzen 3 4300GE7nm Zen 24/83.5 GHz4.1 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 6 / 384 SPs1700 MHz35 W
AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 4750G7nm Zen 28/163.6 GHz4.45 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 8 / 512 SPs2100 MHz65 W
AMD Ryzen 5 PRO 4650G7nm Zen 26/123.7 GHz4.30 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 7 / 448 SPs1900 MHz65 W
AMD Ryzen 3 4350G7nm Zen 24/83.8 GHz4.10 GHz*DDR4-3200Vega 6 / 384 SPs1700 MHz65 W

* denotes estimated boost clock speeds

The final three processors on the table are the ones we’ve already mentioned in this article. These are also the three processors that we have some performance information on, courtesy of the 3DMark leaks.

It looks like the name change could have been made in an effort to better distinguish the gap between the PRO and standard APUs – especially with the similar naming of the four different segments.

Final Word

We still don’t have a firm release date for this 4000 series of APUs. Some sources are pointing towards a late July release date, but it looks like we’ll have to wait and see.

We’ll keep an eye out for any more news, benchmarks, and details of these upcoming Ryzen PRO APUs and keep you updated. Be sure to keep checking back to find all the latest news, as and when it happens.