AMD hasn’t confirmed the GPU yet, but its presence in AIDA64’s latest stable release suggests it's not far off. As spotted by VideoCardz, this adds to a growing stack of unannounced kit that software tools continue to acknowledge, likely before AMD can stage another 10-minute hype show.
The RX 9060 should give punters a cheaper way into RDNA 4, assuming AMD doesn’t go wild with the pricing. With Nvidia’s RTX 5050 and 5060 appearing in AIDA64’s release notes, it’s clear the mid-range GPU slugfest is about to get messy. Even Intel showed up to the party, with its BMG-G31 Battlemage card listed for good measure.
On the CPU side, AIDA64 also includes “preliminary support” for Zen 6, although you’ll have to wait until late 2026 for those chips to become available. If the whispers are true, we’re looking at Ryzen 10000 processors, or whatever rebrand AMD fancies, clocking in at 6.5GHz, with some chatter suggesting it could even tickle 7GHz. That’s less CPU and more space heater with ambition.
Meanwhile, Chipzilla’s roadmap looks tepid. The next round of Arrow Lake chips is reportedly a shrug of a refresh, mostly adding NPU upgrades to bring Copilot+ to desktop machines. Not exactly thrilling news for gamers, unless they’re keen on talking to their PC instead of playing on it.