AMD in its Computex 2026 presentation, celebrated 10 years of the Socket AM4 platform that kickstarted the company’s long march to competitiveness with Intel in the desktop PC processor market, and its eventual domination. Socket AM4 supports the original “Zen” and “Zen+,” across the Ryzen 1000 and Ryzen 2000; and would go on to support Ryzen 3000 “Zen 2,” Ryzen 4000 “Zen 2” APUs, and the vastly successful Ryzen 5000 “Zen 3” series, at which point it had achieved performance leadership over Intel. The company formally launched its “latest” product for AM4, a fresh production run of the Ryzen 7 5800X3D, which is the fastest processor for gaming on the platform.
In 2022, AMD debuted Socket AM5 alongside the Ryzen 7000 series powered by the “Zen 4” architecture. At the time, the company promised a similar cadence of at least two processor generations on the socket, leading up to 2027 (5 years in the market). The company would go on to launch the Ryzen 8000 series APUs, and its current Ryzen 9000 series powered by the “Zen 5” architecture. Its latest product line sees the introduction of Ryzen AI 400 series desktop APUs. Without naming any future processor generation or architecture, AMD announced that AM5 will have platform longevity till 2029. This would mean the introduction of at least one more microarchitecture, “Zen 6,” and the product lines derived from it. Since AMD didn’t announce “Zen 6” at Computex, the company likely won’t debut it in 2026, instead, hold on to the current lineup, and possibly tease or announce “Zen 6” in 2027, with product launches expected that year. This would align with market availability of “Zen 6” for the following two years going into 2029.