
Forget Ryzen AI! AMD launches its SLOWEST processor in years, because 'not all customers can afford a new PC'
AMD has 'relaunched' three processors that use legacy cores to address demand at the lowest end of its mobile and desktop CPU offerings
The CPUs range from 2 to 8 cores and leverage its older Zen+ and Zen 2 core technology as the chip designer grapples with memory and storage shortages to serve an increasingly cash-strapped budget segment
All three processors support Microsoft Windows 11 and leverage cheaper DDR4 memory as manufacturers aims to 'hold the fort' in the face of rising AI demand creating challenges for entry-level PC buyers
AMD's latest Ryzen CPU offering might not be one that most of its performance-centric consumers would appreciate in 2026.
The company is looking to reintroduce three budget-centric mobile CPUs that were last seen over half a decade ago, using legacy Zen+ and Zen 2 cores.
The move comes at a time when assemblers and consumers alike are grappling with increasing chip, memory and storage costs, even as lower-end options continue to grow increasingly limited for price-conscious users.
A Dual-core CPU in 2026?
AMD is reintroducing the Ryzen 3 3100U, Ryzen 5 3501U, and Ryzen 7 4700LE to consumer markets, according to reports. The CPUs offer dual, quad, and octa-core options.
While the Zen 2-based desktop-class Ryzen 7 4700LE has a listed launch date of 25th March 2026, the other two SKUs were launched more recently, in June 2026, according to AMD's own listings.
The Ryzen 3100U and the 3501U both use AMD's legacy Zen+ architecture on a 12nm process node, making them less power-efficient than the 7nm-based Ryzen 7 4700LE.
In an emailed statement to PC World, AMD stated, "The Ryzen 3100U and Ryzen 3501U are additional SKUs based on AMD’s existing Picasso architecture that were developed to support specific OEM requirements in the value segment. These processors are intended to address targeted customer demand for lower-cost solutions and will be available in limited volumes through select OEMs".
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
As OEM components are made directly available to laptop assemblers, AMD does not disclose prices for these models, even as rival chipmaker Intel seems to be taking a similar route.
What might rankle some users in particular is not the fact that the 3100U and the 3501U are rebadged CPUs that will still lag behind pretty much even the most basic laptop CPUs available in the last few years, but the fact that AMD might be thinking it is acceptable to offer a 2-core, 4-thread CPU in 2026 as a baseline for new, entry-level laptops.
The Ryzen 3 3100U is getting considerable ire, as Redditors are already drawing unfavorable comparisons to current-generation Athlon CPUs. While it offers the same iGPU (Vega 8), TDP (15W), and memory configuration (DDR4-2400), along with the same socket (FP5) as its quad-core sibling, it is noticeably weaker than most, if not all, recently launched mobile CPUs.
Unsurprisingly, it does make the cut for Windows 11 by offering support for fTPM, allowing for secure boot, and just pulling ahead of Microsoft's stated requirements for its OS (1 gigahertz (GHz) or faster with 2 or more cores), even as most users will struggle to do anything but the bare minimum on a laptop sporting a CPU essentially rebadged from 2019.
AMD's move, however, is predicated on the fact that rising RAM, SSD, and cutting-edge silicon prices all create a void that must be addressed for the foreseeable future, even as its target audience seems to be getting an increasingly short end of the stick as part of the solution.
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds.
Rahim Amir is a UAE-based tech writer who enjoys building PCs as much as he enjoys writing about them. He has been professionally writing about PC hardware since 2023, focusing on buyer’s guides, hardware reviews, and sponsored content and features related to tech.
Having built hundreds of gaming PCs and being an avid gamer in his spare time, Rahim tends to have stronger opinions about hardware than most. This is particularly on display when he gets his way with powerful, but minimalistic RGB builds even as Small Form Factor (SFF) PCs come a close second.
View original source — TechRadar ↗
Related stories

Uber is no longer offering Waymo rides in Phoenix

Hollywood director gets two and a half years in prison for defrauding Netflix

How to watch the World Cup in Netherlands – can I get a free stream?
