First up, the concrete information. Everest made a table listing all of the known models of AMD’s EPYC Turin processors. These will be the next-generation EPYC 9005 series server processors based on Zen 5. The fastest of the known models sports sixteen CCDs (core chiplet dice), giving it a whopping 128 cores, but there’s also a high-density chip with twelve 16-core CCDs for a massive 192 cores in a single socket. We don’t know much about Zen 5c yet, but the 500W TDP that Everest marks down for that part is rather telling.
Chart compiled by InstLatX64 (@InstLatX64 on Xwitter)
Another known insider, Kepler (@Kepler_L2 on Xwitter), remarked in reply to InstLatX64 that Zen 6 will actually have three separate CCD designs: one with eight cores, one with 16 cores, and one with 32 cores. We can presume that Ryzen chips will feature the 8-core dice, while EPYC parts will likely feature the 16- and 32-core chiplets more prominently—although if we see an EPYC 4006 series, maybe there will be EPYC parts with 8-core CCDs, too.