I doubt this, as their E-cores date back to 2008 (see Intel Atom) and primarily factored into their attempts to penetrate the cell phone & tablet SoC market. Even after they aborted that effort, they've continued to develop them for embedded applications and low-cost Chromebook-class laptops. They've offered them in the cheapest NUCs going back at least as far as Apollo Lake (Goldmont).Intel created the E cores to get AMD out of the laptop/low end desktop market in california.
What are your sources on this?They pushed a bill through the california state senate demanding certain cpus become more "power efficient" and effectively banned all AMD cpu sales in california started in 2025 i think. The "E" cores are supposed to qualify intel chips for this energy efficiency, the hilarious part in all of this, is ever since intel deployed their E cores their cpus have gotten less and less efficiency, meaning the purpose of the california law is being unfulfilled because intel wrote it in such a way as to not hold intel to any energy usage standards, just a core which volts down to a certain number.
As we can see here, intel isn't even trying to pretend E cores are energy efficient anymore. they don't have to, the california law is on the books and supposedly they are in compliance. that is why you see AMD rushing to market their own efficiency core chip. they don't want to be locked out of the cali market.
FWIW, AMD had hybrid APUs in laptops for more than a year and have offered them in AM5 packages since the beginning of this year. See the Ryzen 8000G series, one of which is reviewed here:
I'm pretty sure the main reason AMD pursued their C-core strategy was for the density-optimized cloud market, where they're mainly going up against ARM. The APU market for them seems secondary.
P.S. Let's not forget that AMD once had the "cat" line of E-cores, which were prominently featured in the PS4 and XBox One.
Jaguar (microarchitecture) - Wikipedia
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