AMD’s Ryzen AI Max+ 388 could be a midrange gaming powerhouse
AMD may introduce a midrange processor targeting budget gaming laptops and small form factor computers. Benchmark databases have revealed the Ryzen AI Max+ 388, which appears to reduce core counts while maintaining powerful integrated graphics capabilities from its higher-tier sibling.
The chip features eight Zen 5 cores paired with the Radeon 8060S graphics processor containing 40 RDNA 3.5 compute units. Performance projections place the integrated GPU between laptop versions of the RTX 4060 and RTX 4070, potentially delivering playable frame rates above 60 frames per second at 1080p resolution for demanding titles. Single CCD architecture reduces power draw and thermal output compared to dual-die configurations while lowering manufacturing expenses for computer makers.
Reports indicate the processor will debut in China before possibly expanding to Hong Kong and surrounding areas based on market response. The streamlined design sacrifices multi-threaded performance in professional applications but maintains strong gaming credentials through robust graphics hardware. AMD has previously tested product variants in specific regions ahead of broader launches, potentially signaling a similar approach for this model. Official confirmation could arrive at CES 2026 if the company follows its typical announcement schedule.

