AMD CTO Mark Papermaster has confirmed that EPYC "Venice," the company's first Zen 6 server CPU, will be officially introduced at AMD's Advancing AI event on July 22nd and 23rd. In a recent interview, Papermaster described the upcoming CPUs as optimized for traditional x86 enterprise workloads, noting that enterprise customers aren't moving away from x86. EPYC "Venice" is built on TSMC's 2 nm process, making it the first high-performance computing processor to reach production on that node. Currently, manufacturing is ramping in Taiwan, as AMD announced back in May, with future production planned at TSMC's Arizona facility. The flagship configuration goes up to 256 Zen 6 cores, a 33% jump over the current 192-core EPYC "Turin" lineup. AMD claims over 70% higher performance and efficiency compared to the Zen 5-based predecessor.
On the platform side, "Venice" moves to the new SP7 socket with 16-channel memory support delivering up to 1.6 TB/s of bandwidth, and adopts PCIe Gen 6 for improved CPU-to-GPU communication. This is mostly relevant for the AI accelerator workloads that the EPYC "Venice" Zen 6 CPUs are targeting alongside traditional x86 tasks. These CPUs when installed in Helios racks, will be paired with new AMD Instinct MI455 GPUs. If you're wondering about the mainstream Zen 6 desktop and mobile chips, those are a separate story. Related to those, there's no shortage of rumors and leaks, whether we are talking about the confirmed Ryzen Threadripper TR6 "Mustang Peak", the Ryzen 10000 series "Olympic Ridge" or the "Medusa Point" APUs. However, consumer parts aren't expected before the end of the year at the earliest, with CES 2027 in January being the most likely debut window.