AMD’s next wave of laptop chips just leaked again, and the picture around the Ryzen AI 400 “Gorgon Point” family is getting clearer. Two more SKUs have surfaced on the CrossMark benchmark database, reinforcing the naming scheme and some early specs for this Zen 5-based refresh of Strix Point.
According to the new entries, the Ryzen AI 9 465 and Ryzen AI 7 450 are on the way, joining the previously spotted Ryzen AI 9 HX 470. The lineup is expected to include seven SKUs in total, spanning from Ryzen AI 9 down to Ryzen AI 3, all under the Gorgon Point umbrella.
Here’s what the latest leak suggests:
– Ryzen AI 9 465: Successor to the Ryzen AI 9 365 with a 10-core/20-thread hybrid design mixing Zen 5 and Zen 5c cores. It’s rumored to keep a 5.0 GHz max boost like its predecessor. Cache configuration is expected to stay the same, and integrated graphics should again be Radeon 880M on RDNA 3.5.
– Ryzen AI 7 450: Successor to the Ryzen AI 7 350 with an 8-core/16-thread layout. The base clock is listed at 2.0 GHz, which aligns with the baseline for current Strix Point/Krackan Point parts. Earlier whispers point to a boost clock potentially above 5.2 GHz, though that wasn’t confirmed in this particular benchmark sighting. Expect the same L2+L3 cache structure and RDNA 3.5 integrated graphics, likely in Radeon 860M or 880M form depending on configuration.
There’s also talk of another Ryzen AI 7 400 variant pegged at around a 5.0 GHz boost, so it’s not yet clear which specific AI 7 model showed up on CrossMark. What is consistent across these appearances is the 2.0 GHz base clock, mirroring existing Strix Point/Krackan Point behavior and hinting that Gorgon Point is focused on higher boost ceilings rather than big base-frequency shifts.
As for the broader stack, leaks so far point to:
– Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 at the high end
– Ryzen AI 9 465 in the 10-core/20-thread tier
– Ryzen AI 7 450 in the 8-core/16-thread class
– One more Ryzen AI 7 400 SKU
– Two Ryzen AI 5 400 models
– One Ryzen AI 3 400 entry-level chip that could dip to 6 cores/12 threads
These chips are expected to launch around early 2026, and more benchmark sightings are likely as we get closer. If the information holds, buyers can expect modest clock-speed gains and the same RDNA 3.5 iGPU options carried over from the original Strix Point line, delivering familiar graphics performance with refreshed CPU legs.






