Soldato
On that I am really positive if what the AMD Engineers said on the retracted video back in September last year. (Shame not many watched it when posted it here).
Reason is, a 7nm(TSMC N7) I/O (as he said would be) would reduce the size of the chip to 70-75mm2 (Zen 2 chiplet is 76mm2).
Also Zen 3 chiplets are made in N7+ and are smaller than Zen 2 chiplets, so there is space on the AM4 package to fit 3 8 core chiplets, assuming AMD can pull the wiring and will to do so.
However for AMD to do so, would need to keep boost clocks low, at 4.6ghz max, utilizing the 15% power reduction of the node. It would run hotter than a 3950X so 240mm rad AIO would be about OK to keep it at 75C-ish. Nothing extravagant like the 10900K which needs 360mm AIO to keep it at 90C
We shall see. Might explain why the Intel 11 series goes only up to 8 core also.... No point to compete.
And lets not forget. Price wise AMD could sell cheap and make profit. Already we know has 94%+ yield on N7, and TSMC boasts same yield rate on N7+ (and N7P). At $10,000 wafer means each chiplet costs around $13-14 with those yields.
Not sure if you kept up but they are not going to be on TSMC N7+, it is just a refined N7 which is why AMD removed their + from the most recent slides.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/1558...7nm-7nm-for-future-products-euv-not-specified