AMD readies GFX1156: a new RDNA three point five chip for future processors

Published on June 12, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

AMD has begun integrating support for a new chip with the identifier GFX1156 into its open-source drivers. This piece, associated with the RDNA 3.5 architecture, is destined to appear in future processors from the company. Although the final product remains a mystery, engineers are already working on the drivers to ensure the hardware functions correctly. This anticipates an improvement in integrated graphics performance that we will see in desktop and laptop computers.

AMD GFX1156 chip being integrated into open-source driver code on a monitor screen, engineers hands typing on keyboard while debugging RDNA 3.5 architecture, circuit board close-up with glowing traces and GPU die visible, compiler terminal showing patch submissions, technical engineering visualization, blue and orange ambient lighting, photorealistic render, clean industrial lab background, microscope and oscilloscope nearby, action of code compilation in progress

Drivers in Development: The Technical Details of the GFX1156 🛠️

The inclusion of GFX1156 in the open-source drivers is a clear sign that AMD is fine-tuning compatibility with its next generation of integrated graphics. RDNA 3.5 represents an evolution of the current architecture, with adjustments in power consumption and computational efficiency. Developers have already added specific patches for this identifier in the GPU subsystem. Although it is not confirmed whether it will be for a desktop APU or a mobile solution, the move indicates that engineers already have test hardware in their hands.

The Mysterious Chip: Like a Guest Arriving Before the Party 🎭

AMD has left this GFX1156 in the drivers like someone leaving the keys in the door but without saying which house they belong to. No one knows if it will be for a desktop Ryzen or for that laptop that promises to last longer than a user's patience with Windows Update. The only sure thing is that engineers are already sweating to make everything work, while we sit and wait to see if this time the drivers won't crash when opening the browser.