Skip to main content

AMD is uncharacteristically restricting its awesome new CPU feature

David McAfee presenting AMD's new Ryzen 9000 CPUs.
AMD “Zen 5” Tech Day in Los Angeles, California, Wednesday July 10, 2024. (Photo by PaulSakuma.com Photography) AMD

AMD is introducing an exciting new feature for Ryzen 9000 CPUs called Curve Shaper — and only to Ryzen 9000 CPUs. Curve Shaper is an additional layer of control over AMD’s Curve Optimizer, which can help you quickly dial in an undervolt or overclock on AMD’s Ryzen 5000 CPUs and newer. Curve Shaper is a new cutoff point.

As an AMD tool developer revealed last week, Curve Shaper gives you 15 points of control across the power and frequency spectrum. For each of these points, you can define a positive or negative offset, which applies on top of Curve Optimizer. Let me provide an example.

Recommended Videos

You can use Curve Optimizer to dial in a positive offset of +10 for a slight overclock. With Curve Shaper, you can add an additional +5 offset when you’re running at medium power and high frequency, for example, or a -5 offset for high power and high frequency. It gives you more local control over how your processor behaves.

Results for the Ryzen 9 9950X at AMD's Tech Day.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

It can have a pretty significant impact, too. AMD demoed Curve Shaper, along with its new support for up to DDR5-8000 memory, and showed a massive jump in score with Cinebench R23. This was a universal offset in Curve Optimizer, as well as a couple of small adjustments with Curve Shaper.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

The issue is that only Ryzen 9000 CPUs can use Curve Shaper, and AMD wasn’t able to give me a good reason why. The company confirmed that there’s nothing in Ryzen 9000’s hardware that enables Curve Shaper. The feature could work on Ryzen 7000 CPUs, at the very least. Instead, it pointed to firmware development costs.

AMD showing Curve Shaper in the BIOS.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

This situation feels very similar to Intel’s APO feature, which was initially restricted to 14th-gen CPUs. Intel eventually added support for 12th-gen and 13th-gen CPUs after backlash. It’s possible AMD could reverse course, as well — talking with the company, the feedback on Curve Shaper’s restriction was common.

If you do upgrade to Ryzen 9000, you’ll be able to use the feature through the BIOS. Curve Optimizer is available through AMD’s Ryzen Master utility on desktop, but Curve Shaper is exclusive to the BIOS for now. AMD wouldn’t comment on if it will come to Ryzen Master eventually — though that seems like a pretty safe bet.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
I tested the Core Ultra 9 285K against the Ryzen 7 7800X3D — and it’s ugly
Fingers holding an Intel 285K.

Intel's new Core Ultra 9 285K is finally here, promising a boost in performance with a significant reduction in power requirements, at least according to Intel. As you can read in my Core Ultra 9 285K review, Intel's performance claims aren't as rosy as reality, especially when stacked up against what is unequivocally the best processor for gaming you can buy: AMD's Ryzen 7 7800X3D.

I threw both processors on the test bench to pit them head-to-head, looking at performance across productivity and gaming apps, as well as thermals and efficiency. These CPUs target different users, but there are still a lot of interesting comparisons we can look at between them.
Specs

Read more
New 9800X3D leak: ‘Strong generational boost in games’ is just 8%
AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D held between fingertips.

AMD's best processor for gaming is right around the corner. Through various leaked benchmarks, we've already learned that it might disappoint, and today's leak only serves to confirm that. According to leaked AMD data, the Ryzen 7 9800X3D may offer a subtle improvement in gaming -- although it'll still be better than what most of the Zen 5 lineup has been able to provide.

VideoCardz was able to obtain what appears to be an official marketing description of the Ryzen 7 9800X3D. The blurb reveals things like the predicted improvement in instructions per cycle (IPC), gaming, and multi-threaded workloads. It looks like the real deal, but as with any other leak, it's important to remember that we'll only learn the full story once we test the CPU ourselves.

Read more
Intel’s new Arrow Lake CPUs can still consume a ton of power
Pins on Core i9-12900K.

Intel has made a big deal about the efficiency of its upcoming Arrow Lake CPUs, which are looking to earn a spot among the best processors when they release later this week. Some early benchmark results HXL on X (formerly Twitter) show that the CPUs can still draw a ton of power if you stray from Intel's default power settings, however.

The post, which you can see below, shows the Core Ultra 9 285K peaking at 370 watts of power draw in Cinebench R23's multi-core test. The CPU itself is blacked-out, but you can tell it's the Core Ultra 9 285K from the 24 cores picked up by Cinebench. The Core Ultra 9 285K has a maximum turbo power of 250W, according to Intel, and a base power of 125W.

Read more