AMD News Roundup: Record $9.2 Billion Q3 25 Revenue, New “Strix Halo” APUs Inbound, Faked Leaked 9700 X3D Benchmark, and More

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Image: AMD

AMD was in the news quite a bit over the last week or two with stories spanning multiple aspects of its many products. Now, while we already have coverage of the convoluted happenings regarding recent driver updates and openSIL support, which incidentally marked the first official confirmation for Zen 6 Medusa, as well as the launch of the Radeon AI PRO R9700 with 32 GB GDDR6, and unfortunately, more reports of melted 12VHPWR connectors, there’s plenty more to cover, so let’s dig in.

It’s raining money!

It’s no secret that PC enthusiasts are overwhelmingly happy with AMD’s X3D lineup, but its products in the enterprise and data center sectors are also doing exceedingly well. AMD’s latest Q3 25 financials report indicates an impressive YoY gain for the company, and while many await the launch of new products, its current offerings are generating profitable revenue streams.

“We delivered record quarterly revenue of $9.2 billion, up 36% year-over-year, and generated record free cash flow, reflecting the strength of our leadership portfolio and disciplined execution,”

– Jean Hu, AMD executive vice president, chief financial officer and treasurer

Ryzen AI Max+ 388 and 392

AMD debuted its flagship Ryzen AI Max +395 16C/32T APU (which, btw, is getting used in an upcoming Ayaneo NEXT 2 gaming handheld) this year and followed it with the AI Max +385 and 390. Now there’s the Ryzen AI Max + 388 and 392on the way to further fill out the Halo Strix family of APUs. Per VideoCardz, both the 388 and 392 APUs will feature the full Radeon 8060s RDNA 3.5 graphics solution with 40 compute units. The AI Max+ 392 is a 12C/24T processor with 76 MB total cache and a 5.0 GHz boost clock, while the AI Max+ 388 looks to be a solid, presumably more budget-friendly, 8C/16T processor with 40 MB total cache, also with a 5.0 GHz boost clock.

Rumored Ryzen 7 9700X3D Benchmarks

Update: The User who uploaded the benchmark explains on Reddit that they and their friends accidentally faked the benchmark. There are many more details to be found on the updated post, which includes the link to TPU with the PassMark image shown below.

TL:DR – My friends and I were playing around with Linux and accidentally submitted a 9700X3D score, which got written up in the news. I’d like to set the record straight: The 9700X3D isn’t real, and we should all learn from this. Remember, all benchmarks can be faked!

Original story: Now this one should be tagged as a rumor because the original Videocardz link has gone poof, but not before TechPowerUp managed to report on it. It is worth noting that fake CPU scores have been reported in the past for benchmark results. As such, a purported Zen 5 8C/16T CPU clocked at 5.8 GHz was tested using PassMark. This “9700X3D” had 96 MB L3 cache and scored 40,438 points in the multithreaded test and 4,687 in single-thread benchmarking. Some have speculated that this processor was overclocked during testing.

Image: PassMark

The X3D lineup is king as it outsells Intel’s entire CPU product stack on Amazon

Three generations on, and water is wet as AMD’s X3D lineup continues to be the best seller among PC enthusiasts. Regardless of model, PC users have voted with their wallets since the debut of the X3D lineup with the Ryzen 7 5800X3D and continue to do so with the current AM5 offerings. A new report by TechEpiphany (via TechPowerUp) shows AMD’s processors crushing Intel on Amazon.

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Peter Brosdahl
As a child of the 70’s I was part of the many who became enthralled by the video arcade invasion of the 1980’s. Saving money from various odd jobs I purchased my first computer from a friend of my dad, a used Atari 400, around 1982. Eventually it would end up being a lifelong passion of upgrading and modifying equipment that, of course, led into a career in IT support.

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