CPU Comparison
AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 vs AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485
A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 is an 8-core, 16-thread business-focused mobile APU based on AMD’s Gorgon Point (Zen 5 + Zen 5c) architecture, with integrated Radeon 860M graphics, a 50 TOPS XDNA 2 NPU, and DDR5/LPDDR5X support in a 28 W default TDP envelope. It is designed for professional laptops and desktops where manageability, security, and local AI acceleration are priorities rather than raw multi‑threaded throughput or gaming performance.
The Bottom Line
Overview & Launch
Specifications Compared
Performance Compared
Productivity
Gaming
Virtualization
Efficiency
Specialized Performance
AI / ML
- 50 TOPS NPU matches the NPU in Ryzen AI 7 PRO 360 and other Ryzen AI 400 PRO APUs.
- Overall TOPS up to 66 when combining CPU, GPU, and NPU for mixed AI workloads.
- Well‑positioned for on‑device LLMs, AI‑enhanced collaboration tools, and Windows Studio Effects.
- Memory capacity is the primary bottleneck for AI; the 485 solves this with 192GB support.
- Can load massive LLMs that discrete GPUs simply cannot fit.
- NPU handles Copilot+ PC requirements efficiently.
Content Creation
Gaming
- Radeon 860M with 8 CUs at 3100 MHz is a step down from the 12‑CU Radeon 880M found on Ryzen AI 7 PRO 360.
- Suitable for esports and older titles at 1080p medium; newer AAA games often need low settings or external GPU.
- Not intended as a primary gaming solution; gamers should prefer Ryzen AI 9/HX or Intel H‑series parts.
- 16 Compute Units provide basic graphical capability.
- Suitable for 1080p Low/Medium settings in e-sports titles.
- Not intended for high-fidelity gaming.
- Benefits from fast LPDDR5X memory bandwidth.
Industry Impact
Best CPU by Use Case
Target Audience
Strengths & Weaknesses
Pros
- 8 Zen 5‑class cores with good single‑thread and moderate multi‑thread performance.
- 50 TOPS NPU for local AI inference and Windows Studio Effects.
- AMD PRO technologies for enterprise manageability and security.
- Efficient 4nm process and configurable 15–54 W TDP for diverse form factors.
- Radeon 860M iGPU suitable for light creation and casual gaming.
- DDR5/LPDDR5X support with ECC option for business data integrity.
Cons
- Radeon 860M has fewer CUs than the 880M found in some older Strix Point PRO SKUs.
- Not ideal for high‑refresh AAA gaming or heavy GPU compute workloads.
- Only 8 CPU cores; heavy multi‑threaded rendering is slower than Ryzen AI 9/HX or Intel H‑series chips.
- PRO features and NPU come at a price premium over consumer Ryzen AI 7 450 for some buyers.
- No unlocked multiplier or EXPO/PBO support, limiting enthusiast tuning.
Pros
- Access to 192GB unified memory at the lowest price point in the lineup.
- Highly efficient 8-core Zen 5 CPU.
- XDNA 2 NPU with 50 TOPS performance.
- Enterprise-grade PRO manageability and security features.
- Lower thermal requirements compared to 12/16-core models.
Cons
- Only 8 CPU cores may bottleneck data processing tasks.
- 16-CU iGPU is weak for graphical workloads.
- Limited PCIe 4.0 lanes compared to desktop workstations.
- Locked multiplier restricts traditional overclocking.
- High system cost due to expensive LPDDR5X memory.
Competitors & Alternatives
AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450
- Intel Core Ultra 7 265URival
Business Ultrabook (vPro)
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core Ultra 7 356HRival
High‑Performance Business / Creator
- AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 360Rival
Business (Previous‑Gen PRO)
- AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX PRO 370Rival
High‑End Business Workstation
- AMD Ryzen AI 7 350Rival
Consumer / Prosumer
- AMD Ryzen AI 7 450Alt
Non‑PRO version with essentially the same CPU/GPU but without ECC and PRO manageability; often cheaper if IT features aren’t required.
AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485
- Compare head-to-headApple M4 ProRival
Mobile Workstation
- Intel Core Ultra 7 265HRival
Mobile AI PC
- Qualcomm Snapdragon X EliteRival
Mobile AI PC
- Intel Core i7-1465URival
Commercial Mobile
- Compare head-to-headApple M4Rival
Premium Laptop
Choose the 490 if you need 12 CPU cores and a 32-CU GPU for heavier rendering tasks alongside the memory.
Compare head-to-head- Apple MacBook Pro with M4 ProAlt
Better CPU and GPU performance per dollar, but limited to a maximum of 48GB unified memory.
- High-end Laptop with RTX 4070Alt
Much better gaming and graphics performance, but limited to 16-32GB of VRAM.
- Desktop Workstation (Threadripper / Xeon)Alt
Better upgradeability and PCIe expansion if portability is not required.
- Cloud AI ComputeAlt
More cost-effective if you only need 192GB of memory for occasional tasks.
Our Verdict on Each
A well‑balanced business APU with strong single‑thread performance, a capable NPU, and PRO manageability features, but gamers and heavy creators should look at higher‑end Ryzen AI 9/HX or Intel H‑series chips instead.
Best for: Business laptop or small form factor desktop where you want strong single‑thread CPU performance, local AI acceleration, and AMD PRO manageability, but don’t need high‑end gaming or heavily multi‑threaded workloads.
Read the full reviewA unique entry point into the 192GB unified memory ecosystem, offering essential AI and workstation capabilities in a more cost-effective and thermally efficient package than its higher-end siblings.
Best for: Developers or researchers who need to run large AI models locally on a budget, where memory capacity is more critical than CPU speed.
Read the full reviewFrequently Asked Questions
Which is better, AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 or AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485?
Based on our editorial ratings, the AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485 comes out ahead with a score of 8.5/10. That said, the best choice depends on your workload — check the spec and performance breakdown above for gaming, productivity and efficiency differences.
Which is faster for gaming, AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 or AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485?
For gaming, the AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 leads with a gaming performance score of 68/100 among AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 and AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485.
Which uses less power?
The AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 (28 W), AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485 (55 W).
Do AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450 and AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485 use the same socket?
No. They use different sockets (AMD Ryzen AI 7 PRO 450: FP8, AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 485: FP11), so each needs a compatible motherboard.