AMD Zen 6 and Intel Nova Lake CPUs reportedly arriving late, delayed to CES 2027 — next-gen chips rocked by industry turmoil

1 week ago 37
Next-gen Intel & AMD desktop CPUs delayed (Image credit: Intel / AMD)

The state of the PC, nay, the tech industry at large, is one of confusion right now, characterized by the somewhat still ongoing AI boom despite little real-world benefits. RAM is already three times as expensive, while SSD and GPU prices are also rising. Now, it seems upcoming CPUs are being affected, too, as new info suggests that both AMD and Intel are eyeing delayed launches for their next-gen desktop lineups.

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So, a staggered launch for Zen 6 was likely the plan all along, but the manufacturing crisis might have pushed its mainstream desktop release beyond 2026 to minimize turbulence. An older roadmap leak for AMD's mobile CPUs did put Zen 6 as a 2027 release, so it was never truly confirmed when Olympic Ridge would launch specifically. There was just a general assumption that it would line up with Nova Lake.

Funnily enough, that's still possible as Nova Lake seems to have been pushed back as well. On Weibo, leaker Golden Pig Upgrade has claimed that the Blue Team's next-gen desktop CPUs will be released in 2027, despite CEO Lip-Bu Tan previously confirming a year-end launch. There's still a chance that initial Nova Lake variants come out in Q4 2026, with Nova Lake-S to be officially unveiled at CES 2027.

Nova Lake-S launching in 2027, according to Golden Pig Upgrade

(Image credit: Future)

It's too early to speculate on all this, since Intel's upcoming Arrow Lake refresh hasn't even been announced yet, and the company just launched Panther Lake for mobile devices. AMD is more straightforward, as its next desktop launch is supposed to be Zen 6 with no stopgaps in between. Besides, given the current state of the tech landscape, these reports are only really unearthing rationality rather than revealing shocking information.

Last year, Intel said it was shifting production capacity from consumer chips to data center CPUs, and it's no surprise to see this now. Nearly every company has begun prioritizing AI money — that's how we're in this mess after all — so even though there's no reason given for Nova Lake-S' delay, we might be able to connect the dots with the little info we have.

We do know a lot about specs; however, a couple of days ago, we covered the leaked Zen 6 core configs, which are expected to finally introduce a 12-core CCD, enabling a new 24-core Ryzen flagship. Top-end Nova Lake is a 52-core behemoth on the other hand, with up to 288 MB of bLLC to compete with X3D chips. Either family is set to bring major architectural improvements, so the battle is sure to be spicy.

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Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.

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