The lower-power variants of AMD’s Ryzen APUs are now officially detailed on AMD’s website. The Ryzen 5 2400GE and Ryzen 3 2200GE are both 35W-TDP parts, a 30W drop from the regular 2400G’s and 2200G’s 65W TDP.
The silicon in the GE parts is identical to the regular versions but slightly downclocked. The 2400GE and the 2200GE see a 400/100MHz and 300/100MHz drop in base/boost clock, respectively. The graphics portion of the GE parts aren’t downclocked. See the table below for more details.
Product | Ryzen 3 2200GE | Ryzen 3 2200G | Ryzen 5 2400GE | Ryzen 5 2400G |
---|---|---|---|---|
Core Count (Cores/Threads) | 4/4 | 4/4 | 4/8 | 4/8 |
Core Clock (Base/Boost) | 3.2/3.6GHz | 3.5/3.7GHz | 3.2/3.8GHz | 3.6/3.9GHz |
Graphics Core Count | 8 | 8 | 11 | 11 |
Graphics Clock | 1,100MHz | 1,100MHz | 1,250MHz | 1,250MHz |
TDP | 35W | 65W | 35W | 65W |
Heatsink Included | No | Yes | No | Yes |
AMD hasn’t made an official announcement for these parts yet, so we don’t pricing and availability info. The 2400G/GE and 2200G/GE parts are called 2nd-gen Ryzen parts by AMD, but they’re different from the bulk of the 2nd-gen Ryzen processors. They still use 14nm process – note the newer 12nm fabrication process of their more powerful CPUs which launched last week.