
According to Advanced Micro Devices (Advanced Micro Devices), the company announced on May 21 that its next-generation AMD EPYC server processor, codenamed “Venice,” has officially entered mass production. The chip is manufactured using the most advanced 2nm process technology from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company), marking a major milestone in high-performance computing (HPC) as one of the first 2nm products to reach volume production in this segment.
AMD stated that “Venice” represents a key step in accelerating the development of next-generation AI infrastructure. The company emphasized that as AI workloads and agentic computing applications continue to expand rapidly, customers increasingly require platforms that can move from innovation to production at greater speed and scale. Close collaboration with TSMC enables AMD to bring leading-edge compute solutions to market in line with these evolving demands.
Looking ahead, AMD also plans to extend TSMC’s 2nm process technology to its sixth-generation EPYC processor, codenamed “Verano.” Designed for cloud and AI computing environments, “Verano” is expected to build on the EPYC platform with further architectural and memory subsystem innovations, aiming to deliver enhanced performance and energy efficiency for increasingly power-constrained workloads.
The mass production of “Venice,” along with AMD’s future capacity expansion plans that include TSMC’s Arizona fab, highlights the company’s continued strategy to strengthen its geographically diversified advanced manufacturing footprint and supply chain resilience in the global semiconductor industry.