Likely. I'm not sure if there's any difference between a 5700G and a 5980HX besides the binning; if you can't get 3.3GHz base, 4.8GHz boost and 2.1GHz GPU out of the 8 core 8 CU package at 45W, let it run 3.6 GHz base at 65W and slap it into a AM4 package as a 5700G.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/16446/amd-ryzen-9-5980hs-cezanne-review-ryzen-5000-mobile-tested
Look at the table half way down. Just make 65W TDP versions of those and you have the 5700G and 5600G.
No doubt the same deal with the GE variants for Ryzen Pro.
Seems like a credible theory, especially because the l3 cache amounts are the same. Since the mobile design already exists, it should be easy to ramp up production.
That means we already know roughly what the performance will be like, presumably the desktop variants may be able to overclock a bit higher on all cores? I bet a beefy cooler is required to get the best out of them too.
The only obvious drawback, is that the memory controller is still limited to 3200mhz RAM speeds, same as other Zen 3 CPUs.
EDIT - It looks like it the CPU performance will be quite gimped by the 16MB of L3 cache, compared to a 11700K. Based on results from this video review here, CPU only tests from 7:07 onwards:
https://youtu.be/RN683sShPKI?t=430
The 1% low and average framerates are significantly slower in games such as CYBERPUNK 2077, Red Dead Redemption 2, Hitman 3 and Mafia. At least you can get 1% lows of 65 FPS or above in Cyberpunk 2077.
Kind of hard to recommend this as a gaming CPU now, I'm a bit surprised to see how much difference gimping the L3 cache (from 32 on Zen3 CPUs to 16 on the APUs). In the test, the reviewer is running the CPU at 4450mhz, so maybe clocking the CPU 200-300mhz higher will help a bit.
The iGPU does a good job though, with 1% lows of 25-60 FPS depending on the game (I think he's playing on max settings at 1080p).
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