AMD is about to make local AI on Radeon graphics cards much easier to set up. The company has confirmed that its new AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition AI Bundle will arrive on January 21 as an optional update delivered through the Adrenalin drivers, giving Radeon GPU owners a simpler path into AI development and AI-powered creative workflows.
Positioned with the tagline “AI made simple,” the upcoming Adrenalin AI Bundle is designed to remove a major pain point for many users: the time-consuming process of hunting down compatible components, configuring dependencies, and getting the right tools working together before you can even start experimenting. Instead, AMD says the AI Bundle will provide a single streamlined installer that equips an AMD-powered PC with the essential tools needed to build and run local AI workloads.
While AMD hasn’t revealed the full list of included software yet, the company has outlined the core goals and use cases. The bundle is expected to help users quickly access popular applications for tasks like AI image generation and running local large language models (LLMs). It will also introduce new PyTorch support on Windows, which can make it far more convenient for developers and hobbyists to test models, prototype ideas, and explore AI projects directly on their Windows PCs using AMD hardware.
For creators, this approach could be especially appealing. Many common AI-assisted content creation workflows benefit from local processing, whether that’s generating images, experimenting with models, or using AI tools without relying as heavily on cloud services. AMD’s installer aims to make that experience more approachable, particularly for people who are curious about AI but don’t want to spend hours troubleshooting installs and compatibility issues.
AMD is keeping specifics under wraps for now, only noting that the AI Bundle includes “essential tools” for AI development and creative workloads. The complete breakdown of what’s included should be announced when the installer officially launches on January 21.
This move also fits AMD’s broader push into AI across its newer hardware lineup, including Ryzen AI processors and the latest Radeon GPU architectures. A unified Adrenalin AI Bundle could help tie that hardware messaging to a practical, easy-to-use software experience—something many users have been asking for as local AI adoption continues to grow.






