Take a look at these stunning PS5 die shots, courtesy of photographer Fritzchens Fritz, the legend who shoots infrared close ups of computer chips. Sure they're gorgeous, but look closer and you might notice something's amiss.
These images show highlight the essential building blocks of the as-yet-unreleased AMD Radeon RX 6700, along with the company's Zen 2 CPU architecture, nestled deep within the Sony PS5. But Fritz, among others, noticed parts of the Zen 2 architecture have been omitted, along with apparent discrepancies in terms of GPU features.
Locuza, known for bringing further detailed analysis to shots like these, notes that we're looking at a "modified Zen 2 CPU."
Across the whole system, there are a few differences to note. Though we're still looking at advanced Zen 2 branch prediction and larger branch target buffers, among other things, it seems there are some parts Sony and AMD have left out. These include cut down FP pipes—from 256-bit down to 128-bit—as well as a lack of Infinity Cache (similarly to the Xbox), and potentially the presence of an older render backend design.
My interpretation of the floor plan PS5 floor plan:1. Bomba surprise that Sony likely cut down the 256-Bit FP pipes to just 128-Bit. 2. No Infinity Cache/L3$, also not on the Xbox Series. 3. Might have the old Render Backend design, need higher res to say for sure. 4. ... https://t.co/gwrXI903U8 pic.twitter.com/Vvmm1hGSM8February 14, 2021
Further to this, it would seem the system's graphics processing chip's WPGs have been arranged as per the first-generation RDNA architecture. As Locuza notes, these shots show two WFG sub arrays, whereas AMD's "Navi 21/22/23, Van Gogh and Rembrandt only have one sub-array for all WGPs."
We've already seen that the PS5 version of the RDNA architecture sits somewhere between the Navi 22 and Navi 23, with 36 Compute Units packed in—just under half that of the 80 CU Navi 21. Basically, this is just confirmation of Sony and AMD having come together to make something unique, as opposed to just dropping standard desktop hardware into the PS5. We're getting something like an RDNA 1.5 then, it seems.
All in all it's nothing we hadn't expected, as Sony's Mark Cerny has explained in the past.
Still, let us once again marvel at the wonders of macro-imagery with some more shots of the PS5's internals, courtesy of Fritzchens Fritz:
Simply gorgeous...
The Link LonkFebruary 15, 2021 at 08:22PM
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Die shots of Sony's PS5 chip reveal that something's missing - PC Gamer
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