AMD shows off Intel-beating Zen architecture - and provides a glimpse of what its Vega GPUs can do

AMD CEO Dr Lisa Su claims new microprocessors can match or beat Intel for performance

AMD has shown off microprocessors based on its forthcoming Zen-based architecture - dubbed Ryzen for chips intended for PCs - together with a first look at its new Vega-based GPU that is intended to take on Nvidia's impressive GeForce 10-series based GPUs.

The company is intending to stoke-up interest in its long-awaited new architecture that, it claims, will be available in the first quarter of 2017, while putting off anyone planning to buy an Intel Skylake-based PC for Christmas.

The company claims that, with the Zen architecture, it will no longer be the poor relation to Intel, performance-wise, and that it can compete with Intel's finest (and most expensive) parts.

In an hour-long event hosted by games journalist Geoff Keighley, the company showed off an eight-core, 16-thread desktop Zen-based processor running at 3.4GHz that, it claimed, can outperform the Intel i7 6900K (current UK list price: £1,125.99) running heavyweight applications like the open-source 3D imaging application Blender.

AMD also show-cased its latest architecture in combination with the also-upcoming Vega GPU by demonstrating Star Wars Battlefront - Rogue One at 4k resolution with decently high frame-rates. It was the first time that the company had shown off the new Vega GPU cores, which are intended to compete with the Nvidia's GeForce 10 series architecture that has turned heads this year.

AMD claims that the Ryzen/Vega combination can outperform the Intel Core i7 6900K paired with an Nvidia Titan X playing Battlefield 1 at 4k resolution.

"The 'Zen' core at the heart of our Ryzen processors is the result of focused execution and thousands of engineering hours designing and delivering a next-level experience for high-end PC and workstation users," said Doctor Lisa Su, presenting what is arguably the first real technical fruits of her tenure as the company's chief executive.

The key to Zen, she added, in addition to the shift to 14nm process manufacturing, was what the company called SenseMI, which has enabled an increase of more than 40 per cent in instructions per clock cycle. It, claims AMD, is comprised of five main components:

AMD has been drip-feeding information about its next-gen architecture for the past year or so, in a bid to persuade the market that it isn't being totally left behind by Intel.

In February, for example, it revealed plans for 32-core parts built using 14nm FinFET technology, while in August it slipped out more information on its plans for the high-performance desktop microprocessors it aims to ship next year.