AMD's next-generation Medusa Point APU has resurfaced in benchmark databases with significantly improved scores, offering a clearer picture of its performance capabilities. This update matters because the new results show the chip is now outperforming current high-end mobile processors in both single-threaded and multi-threaded tasks. Buyers interested in next-generation mobile computing should note that these figures suggest a substantial leap in processing power over existing options.
New benchmark data reveals Zen 6 chip outperforming current high-end mobile processors
The processor is built on AMD's Zen 6 architecture and appears under the Plum-MDS1 platform identifier. It features a 10-core and 20-thread configuration that targets high-performance mobile workloads. Early engineering samples of this platform were previously seen in March, but those earlier results were notably lower than the current data.
Medusa Point APU Specifications
- Cores/Threads: 10 cores, 20 threads
- Geekbench 6.6.0 Single-Core: 3174 points
- Geekbench 6.6.0 Multi-Core: 15092 points
- Base Clock: 2.00 GHz
- Max Reported Frequency: 2063 MHz
In Geekbench 6.6.0 testing, the Medusa Point APU achieved a single-core score of 3174 points. This result places it approximately 22 percent ahead of the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370, which scored 2605 points in the same test. The multi-core performance is equally impressive, with the new APU scoring 15092 points compared to the HX 370's 13396 points, a margin of about 13 percent.

Technical details reveal a base clock speed of 2.00 GHz with a maximum reported frequency of 2063 MHz. The chip includes 10 MB of L2 cache and 32 MB of L3 cache to support its processing tasks. It also supports advanced instruction sets including AVX512-FP16 and AVX-VNNI, which are designed to enhance efficiency for specific computational workloads.
Readers should treat these clock speed and frequency readings with caution, as early engineering samples often report inaccurate data in benchmark software. The performance gains are real in terms of raw scoring, but the actual operating frequencies may differ in final production units. We looked at earlier Plum-MDS1 leaks while tracking these Zen 6 developments to understand the progression of this architecture.
The Medusa Point APU currently holds confirmed benchmark scores that exceed the Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 in both single and multi-core categories. Final pricing and availability details have not been released, so these performance metrics represent the most concrete data available for this upcoming hardware.



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