PowerVR


PowerVR is a division of Imagination Technologies that develops hardware and software for 2D and 3D rendering, and for video encoding, decoding, associated image processing and DirectX, OpenGL ES, OpenVG, and OpenCL acceleration. PowerVR also develops AI accelerators called Neural Network Accelerator.
The PowerVR product line was originally introduced to compete in the desktop PC market for 3D hardware accelerators with a product with a better price–performance ratio than existing products like those from 3dfx Interactive. Rapid changes in that market, notably with the introduction of OpenGL and Direct3D, led to rapid consolidation. PowerVR introduced new versions with low-power electronics that were aimed at the laptop computer market. Over time, this developed into a series of designs that could be incorporated into system-on-a-chip architectures suitable for handheld device use.
PowerVR accelerators are not manufactured by PowerVR, but instead their integrated circuit designs and patents are licensed to other companies, such as Texas Instruments, Intel, NEC, BlackBerry, Renesas, Samsung, STMicroelectronics, Freescale, Apple, NXP Semiconductors, and many others.

Technology

The PowerVR chipset uses a method of 3D rendering known as tile-based deferred rendering which is tile-based rendering combined with PowerVR's proprietary method of Hidden Surface Removal and Hierarchical Scheduling Technology. As the polygon generating program feeds triangles to the PowerVR, it stores them in memory in a triangle strip or an indexed format. Unlike other architectures, polygon rendering is not performed until all polygon information has been collated for the current frame. Furthermore, the expensive operations of texturing and shading of pixels is delayed, whenever possible, until the visible surface at a pixel is determined — hence rendering is deferred.
In order to render, the display is split into rectangular sections in a grid pattern. Each section is known as a tile. Associated with each tile is a list of the triangles that visibly overlap that tile. Each tile is rendered in turn to produce the final image.
Tiles are rendered using a process similar to ray-casting. Rays are numerically simulated as if cast onto the triangles associated with the tile and a pixel is rendered from the triangle closest to the camera. The PowerVR hardware typically calculates the depths associated with each polygon for one tile row in 1 cycle.
This method has the advantage that, unlike a more traditional early Z rejection based hierarchical systems, no calculations need to be made to determine what a polygon looks like in an area where it is obscured by other geometry. It also allows for correct rendering of partially transparent polygons, independent of the order in which they are processed by the polygon producing application.
More importantly, as the rendering is limited to one tile at a time, the whole tile can be in fast on-chip memory, which is flushed to video memory before processing the next tile. Under normal circumstances, each tile is visited just once per frame.
PowerVR is a pioneer of tile based deferred rendering. Microsoft also conceptualized the idea with their abandoned Talisman project. Gigapixel, a company that developed IP for tile-based 3D graphics, was purchased by 3dfx, which in turn was subsequently purchased by Nvidia. Nvidia has now been shown to use tile rendering in the Maxwell and Pascal microarchitectures for a limited amount of geometry.
ARM began developing another major tile based architecture known as Mali after their acquisition of Falanx.
Intel uses a similar concept in their integrated graphics products. However, its method, called zone rendering, does not perform full hidden surface removal and deferred texturing, therefore wasting fillrate and texture bandwidth on pixels that are not visible in the final image.
Recent advances in hierarchical Z-buffering have effectively incorporated ideas previously only used in deferred rendering, including the idea of being able to split a scene into tiles and of potentially being able to accept or reject tile sized pieces of polygon.
Today, the PowerVR software and hardware suite has ASICs for video encoding, decoding and associated image processing. It also has virtualisation, and DirectX, OpenGL ES, OpenVG, and OpenCL acceleration.
Newest PowerVR Wizard GPUs have fixed-function Ray Tracing Unit hardware and support hybrid rendering.

PowerVR Graphics

Series1 (NEC)

The first series of PowerVR cards was mostly designed as 3D-only accelerator boards that would use the main 2D video card's memory as framebuffer over PCI. Videologic's first PowerVR PC product to market was the 3-chip Midas3, which saw very limited availability in some OEM Compaq PCs. This card had very poor compatibility with all but the first Direct3D games, and even most SGL games did not run. However, its internal 24-bit color precision rendering was notable for the time.
The single-chip PCX1 was released in retail as the VideoLogic Apocalypse 3D and featured an improved architecture with more texture memory, ensuring better game compatibility. This was followed by the further refined PCX2, which clocked 6 MHz higher, offloaded some driver work by including more chip functionality and added bilinear filtering, and was released in retail on the Matrox M3D and Videologic Apocalypse 3Dx cards. There was also the Videologic Apocalypse 5D Sonic, which combined the PCX2 accelerator with a Tseng ET6100 2D core and ESS Agogo sound on a single PCI board.
The PowerVR PCX cards were placed in the market as budget products and performed well in the games of their time, but weren't quite as fully featured as the 3DFX Voodoo accelerators. However, the PowerVR approach of rendering to the 2D card's memory meant that much higher 3D rendering resolutions could be possible in theory, especially with PowerSGL games that took full advantage of the hardware.
The second generation PowerVR2 was brought to market in the Dreamcast console between 1998 and 2001. As part of an internal competition at Sega to design the successor to the Saturn, the PowerVR2 was licensed to NEC and was chosen ahead of a rival design based on the 3dfx Voodoo 2. It was called "the Highlander Project" during development. The PowerVR2 was paired with the Hitachi SH-4 in the Dreamcast, with the SH-4 as the T&L geometry engine and the PowerVR2 as the rendering engine. The PowerVR2 also powered the Sega Naomi, the upgraded arcade system board counterpart of the Dreamcast.
However, the success of the Dreamcast meant that the PC variant, sold as Neon 250, appeared a year late to the market, in late 1999. The Neon 250 was nevertheless competitive with the RIVA TNT2 and Voodoo3. The Neon 250 features inferior hardware specifications compared to the PowerVR2 part used in Dreamcast, such as a halved tile size, among others.
In 2001, the third generation PowerVR3 STG4000 KYRO was released, manufactured by new partner STMicroelectronics. The architecture was redesigned for better game compatibility and expanded to a dual-pipeline design for more performance. The refresh STM PowerVR3 KYRO II, released later in the same year, likely had a lengthened pipeline to attain higher clock speeds and was able to rival the more expensive ATI Radeon DDR and NVIDIA GeForce 2 GTS in some benchmarks of the time, despite its modest specifications on paper and lack of hardware transform and lighting, a fact that Nvidia especially tried to capitalize on in a confidential paper they sent out to reviewers. As games increasingly started to include more geometry with this feature in mind, the KYRO II lost its competitiveness.
The KYRO series had a decent featureset for a budget-oriented GPU in their time, including a few Direct3D 8.1-compliant features such as 8-layer multitexturing and Environment Mapped Bump Mapping ; Full Scene Anti-Aliasing and Trilinear/Anisotropic filtering were also present. KYRO II could also perform Dot Product Bump Mapping at a similar speed as GeForce 2 GTS in benchmarks. Omissions included hardware T&L, Cube Environment Mapping and legacy 8-bit paletted texture support. While the chip supported S3TC/DXTC texture compression, only the DXT1 format was supported. Support for the proprietary PowerSGL API was also dropped with this series.
16-bit output quality was excellent compared to most of its competitors, thanks to rendering to its internal 32-bit tile cache and downsampling to 16-bit instead of straight use of a 16-bit framebuffer. This could play a role in improving performance without losing much image quality, as memory bandwidth was not plentiful. However, due to its unique concept on the market, the architecture could sometimes exhibit flaws such as missing geometry in games, and therefore the driver had a notable amount of compatibility settings, such as switching off the internal Z-buffer. These settings could cause a negative impact on performance.
A second refresh of the KYRO was planned for 2002, the STG4800 KYRO II SE. Samples of this card were sent to reviewers but it does not appear to have been brought to market. Apart from a clockspeed boost, this refresh was announced with a "EnT&L" HW T&L software emulation, which eventually made it into the drivers for the previous KYRO cards starting with version 2.0. The STG5500 KYRO III, based upon the next-generation PowerVR4, was completed and would have included hardware T&L but was shelved due to STMicro closing its graphics division.
PowerVR achieved great success in the mobile graphics market with its low power PowerVR MBX. MBX, and its SGX successors, are licensed by seven of the top ten semiconductor manufacturers including Intel, Texas Instruments, Samsung, NEC, NXP Semiconductors, Freescale, Renesas and Sunplus. The chips were used in many high-end cellphones including the original iPhone and iPod Touch, Nokia N95, Sony Ericsson P1 and Motorola RIZR Z8. It was also used in some PDA's such as the Dell Axim X50V and X51V featuring the MBX Lite powered Intel 2700G, as well as in set-top boxes featuring the MBX Lite-powered Intel CE 2110.
There are two variants: MBX and MBX Lite. Both have the same feature set. MBX is optimized for speed and MBX Lite is optimized for low power consumption. MBX could be paired up with an FPU, Lite FPU, VGP Lite and VGP.

PowerVR Video Cores (MVED/VXD) and Video/Display Cores (PDP)

PowerVR's VXD is used in Apple iPhone, and their PDP series is used in some HDTVs, including the Sony BRAVIA.

Series5 (SGX)

PowerVR's Series5 SGX series features pixel, vertex, and geometry shader hardware, supporting OpenGL ES 2.0 and DirectX 10.1 with Shader Model 4.1.
The SGX GPU core is included in several popular systems-on-chip used in many portable devices. Apple uses the A4 in their iPhone 4, iPad, iPod touch, and Apple TV, and uses the Apple S1 in the Apple Watch. Texas Instruments' OMAP 3 and 4 series SoC's are used in the Amazon's Kindle Fire HD 8.9", Barnes and Noble's Nook HD, BlackBerry PlayBook, Nokia N9, Nokia N900, Sony Ericsson Vivaz, Motorola Droid/Milestone, Motorola Defy, Motorola RAZR D1/D3, Droid Bionic, Archos 70, Palm Pre, Samsung Galaxy SL, Galaxy Nexus, Open Pandora, and others. Samsung produces the Hummingbird SoC and uses it in their Samsung Galaxy S, Galaxy Tab, Samsung Wave S8500 Samsung Wave II S8530 and Samsung Wave III S860 devices. Hummingbird is also in Meizu M9 smartphone.
Intel uses the SGX540 in its Medfield platform for smartphones.

Series5XT (SGX)

PowerVR Series5XT SGX chips are multi-core variants of the SGX series with some updates. It is included in the PlayStation Vita portable gaming device with the MP4+ Model of the PowerVR SGX543, the only intended difference, aside from the + indicating features customized for Sony, is the cores, where MP4 denotes 4 cores whereas the MP8 denotes 8 cores. The Allwinner A31 features the dual-core SGX544 MP2. The Apple iPad 2 and iPhone 4S with the A5 SoC also feature a dual-core SGX543MP2. The iPad A5X SoC features the quad-core SGX543MP4. The iPhone 5 A6 SoC features the tri-core SGX543MP3. The iPad A6X SoC features the quad-core SGX554MP4. The Exynos variant of the Samsung Galaxy S4 sports the tri-core SGX544MP3 clocked at 533 MHz.
These GPU can be used in either single-core or multi-core configurations.

Series5XE (SGX)

Introduced in 2014, the PowerVR GX5300 GPU is based on the SGX architecture and is the world's smallest Android-capable graphics core, providing low-power products for entry-level smartphones, wearables, IoT and other small footprint embedded applications, including enterprise devices such as printers.

Series6 (Rogue)

PowerVR Series6 GPUs are based on an evolution of the SGX architecture codenamed Rogue. ST-Ericsson announced that its Nova application processors would include Imagination's next-generation PowerVR Series6 architecture. MediaTek announced the quad-core MT8135 system on a chip for tablets. Renesas announced its R-Car H2 SoC includes the G6400. Allwinner Technology A80 SoC, that is available in the Onda V989 tablet, features a PowerVR G6230 GPU. The Apple A7 SoC integrates a graphics processing unit which AnandTech believes to be a PowerVR G6430 in a four cluster configuration.
PowerVR Series 6 GPUs have 2 TMUs/cluster.

Series6XE (Rogue)

PowerVR Series6XE GPUs are based around Series6 and designed as entry-level chips aimed at offering roughly the same fillrate compared to the Series5XT series. They however feature refreshed API support such as Vulkan, OpenGL ES 3.1, OpenCL 1.2 and DirectX 9.3. Rockchip and Realtek have used Series6XE GPUs in their SoCs.
PowerVR Series 6XE GPUs were announced on January 6, 2014.

Series6XT (Rogue)

PowerVR Series6XT GPUs aims at reducing power consumption further through die area and performance optimization providing a boost of up to 50% compared to Series6 GPUs. Those chips sport PVR3C triple compression system-level optimizations and Ultra HD deep color. The Apple iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus and iPod Touch with the A8 SoC feature the quad-core GX6450. An unannounced 8 cluster variant was used in the Apple A8X SoC for their iPad Air 2 model. The MediaTek MT8173 and Renesas R-Car H3 SoCs use Series6XT GPUs.
PowerVR Series 6XT GPUs were unveiled on January 6, 2014.

Series7XE (Rogue)

PowerVR Series 7XE GPUs were announced on 10 November 2014. When announced, the 7XE series contained the smallest Android Extension Pack compliant GPU.

Series7XT (Rogue)

PowerVR Series7XT GPUs are available in configurations ranging from two to 16 clusters, offering dramatically scalable performance from 100 GFLOPS to 1.5 TFLOPS. The GT7600 is used in the Apple iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus models as well as the Apple iPhone SE model and the Apple iPad model respectively. An unannounced 12 cluster variant was used in the Apple A9X SoC for their iPad Pro models.
PowerVR Series 7XT GPUs were unveiled on 10 November 2014.

Series7XT Plus (Rogue)

PowerVR Series7XT Plus GPUs are an evolution of the Series7XT family and add specific features designed to accelerate computer vision on mobile and embedded devices, including new INT16 and INT8 data paths that boost performance by up to 4x for OpenVX kernels. Further improvements in shared virtual memory also enable OpenCL 2.0 support. The GT7600 Plus is used in the Apple iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus models as well as the Apple iPad model.
PowerVR Series 7XT Plus GPUs were announced on International CES, Las Vegas – 6 January 2016.
Series7XT Plus achieve up to 4x performance increase for vision applications.
The GPUs are designed to offer improved in-system efficiency, improved power efficiency and reduced bandwidth for vision and computational photography in consumer devices, mid-range and mainstream smartphones, tablets and automotive systems such as advanced driver assistance systems, infotainment, computer vision and advanced processing for instrument clusters.
The new GPUs include new feature set enhancements with a focus on next-generation compute:
Up to 4x higher performance for OpenVX/vision algorithms compared to the previous generation through improved integer performance
Bandwidth and latency improvements through shared virtual memory in OpenCL 2.0
Dynamic parallelism for more efficient execution and control through support for device enqueue in OpenCL 2.0

Series8XE (Rogue)

PowerVR Series8XE GPUs support OpenGL ES 3.2 and Vulkan 1.x and are available in 1, 2, 4 and 8 pixel/clock configurations, enabling the latest games and apps and further driving down the cost of high quality UIs on cost sensitive devices.
PowerVR Series 8XE were announced February 22, 2016 at the Mobile World Congress 2016. There are an iteration of the Rogue microarchitecture and target entry-level SoC GPU market.
New GPUs improve the performance/mm2 for the smallest silicon footprint and power profile, while also incorporating hardware virtualization and multi-domain security. Newer model were later released in January 2017, with a new low end and high end part.

Series8XE Plus (Rogue)

PowerVR Series 8XE Plus were announced January 2017. There are an iteration of the Rogue microarchitecture and target the mid range SoC GPU market, targeting 1080p. The 8XE Plus remains focused on die size and performance per unit

Series8XT (Furian)

Announced on 8 March 2017, Furian is the first new PowerVR architecture since Rogue was introduced five years earlier.
PowerVR Series 8XT were announced March 8, 2017. It's the first series GPU's based on the new Furian architecture. According to Imagination, GFLOPS/mm2 is improved 35% and Fill rate/mm2 is improved 80% compared to the 7XT Plus series on the same node. Specific designs aren't announced as of March 2017. Series8XT features 32-wide pipeline clusters.

Series9XE (Rogue)

Announced in September 2017, Series9XE family of GPUs benefit from up to 25% Bandwidth savings over the previous generation GPUs. The Series9XE family is targeted for set-top boxes, digital TVs and low end smartphones SoCs
Note: Data in table is per cluster.

Series9XM (Rogue)

The Series9XM family of GPUs achieve up to 50% better performance density than the previous 8XEP generation. The Series9XM family targets mid-range smartphone SoCs.

Series9XEP (Rogue)

The Series9XEP family of GPUs was announced on December 4, 2018. The Series9XEP family supports PVRIC4 image compression. The Series9XEP family targets set-top boxes, digital TVs and low end smartphones SoCs.

Series9XMP (Rogue)

The Series9XMP family of GPUs was announced on December 4, 2018. The Series9XMP family supports PVRIC4 image compression. The Series9XMP family targets mid-range smartphone SoCs.

Series9XTP (Furian)

The Series9XTP family of GPUs was announced on December 4, 2018. The Series9XTP family supports PVRIC4 image compression. The Series9XTP family targets high-end smartphone SoCs. Series9XTP features 40-wide pipeline clusters.

IMG A-Series (Albiorix)

The A-Series GPUs offer up to 250% better performance density than the previous Series 9. These GPUs are no longer called PowerVR, they are called IMG. Imagination Technologies signed a new "multi-year, multi-lease agreement" with Apple for integration in future iOS devices on January 2, 2020. The re-kindling of the partnership between the two companies comes as Apple's licences to Imagination graphics IP expire at the end of 2019.
Notes

Series2NX

The Series2NX family of Neural Network Accelerators was announced on September 21, 2017.
Series2NX core options:
ModelDateEngines8-bit TOPS16-bit TOPS8-bit MACs16-bit MACsAPIs--------
ModelDateEngines8-bit TOPS16-bit TOPS8-bit MACs16-bit MACsAPIsAX2145September 2017?10.5512/clk256/clkIMG DNN
Android NN
AX218584.12.02048/clk1024/clk---September 2017-----IMG DNN
Android NN

Series3NX

The Series3NX family of Neural Network Accelerators was announced on December 4, 2018.
Series3NX core options:
ModelDateEngines8-bit TOPS16-bit TOPS8-bit MACs16-bit MACsAPIs--------
ModelDateEngines8-bit TOPS16-bit TOPS8-bit MACs16-bit MACsAPIsAX3125December 2018?0.6?256/clk64/clkIMG DNN
Android NN
AX3145?1.2?512/clk128/clk---December 2018-----IMG DNN
Android NN
AX3365?2.0?1024/clk256/clk---December 2018-----IMG DNN
Android NN
AX3385?4.0?2048/clk512/clk---December 2018-----IMG DNN
Android NN
AX3595?10.0?4096/clk1024/clk---December 2018-----IMG DNN
Android NN

Series3NX multi-core options
ModelDateCores8-bit TOPS16-bit TOPS8-bit MACs16-bit MACsAPIs--------
ModelDateCores8-bit TOPS16-bit TOPS8-bit MACs16-bit MACsAPIsUH2X40December 2018220.0?8192/clk2048/clkIMG DNN
Android NN
UH4X40440.0?16384/clk4096/clk---December 2018-----IMG DNN
Android NN
UH8X40880.0?32768/clk8192/clk---December 2018-----IMG DNN
Android NN
UH16X4016160.0?65536/clk16384/clk---December 2018-----IMG DNN
Android NN

Series3NX-F

The Series3NX-F family of Neural Network Accelerators was announced alongside the Series3NX family. The Series3NX-F family combines the Series 3NX with a Rogue-based GPGPU, and local RAM. This allows support for programmability and floating-point.

Implementations

The PowerVR GPU variants can be found in the following table of systems on chips. Implementations of PowerVR accelerators in products are listed here.
VendorDateSOC namePowerVR chipsetFrequencyGFLOPS
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3420SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3430SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3440SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3450SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3515SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3517SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3530SGX530110 MHz0.88
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3620SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3621SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3630SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsOMAP 3640SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsSitara AM335xSGX530200 MHz1.6
Texas InstrumentsSitara AM3715SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsSitara AM3891SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsDaVinci DM3730SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsIntegra C6A8168SGX530??
NECEMMA Mobile/EV2SGX530??
RenesasSH-Mobile G3SGX530??
RenesasSH-Navi3 SGX530??
Sigma DesignsSMP8656SGX530??
Sigma DesignsSMP8910SGX530??
Texas InstrumentsDM3730SGX530200 MHz1.6
MediaTekMT6513SGX531281 MHz2.25
MediaTek2010MT6573SGX531281 MHz2.25
MediaTek2012MT6575MSGX531281 MHz2.25
TridentPNX8481SGX531??
TridentPNX8491SGX531??
TridentHiDTV PRO-SX5SGX531??
MediaTekMT6515SGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTek2011MT6575SGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTekMT6517SGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTekMT6517TSGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTek2012MT6577SGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTekMT6577TSGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTekMT8317SGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTekMT8317TSGX531522 MHz4.2
MediaTekMT8377SGX531522 MHz4.2
NECNaviEngine EC-4260SGX535??
NECNaviEngine EC-4270SGX535??
IntelCE 3100 SGX535??
IntelSCH US15/W/L SGX535??
IntelCE4100 SGX535??
IntelCE4110 SGX535200 MHz1.6
IntelCE4130 SGX535200 MHz1.6
IntelCE4150 SGX535400 MHz3.2
IntelCE4170 SGX535400 MHz3.2
IntelCE4200 SGX535400 MHz3.2
SamsungAPL0298C05SGX535??
AppleApril 3, 2010Apple A4 SGX535200 MHz1.6
AppleApril 3, 2010Apple A4 SGX535250 MHz2.0
AmbarellaiOneSGX540??
RenesasSH-Mobile G4SGX540??
RenesasSH-Mobile APE4 SGX540??
RenesasR-Car E2 SGX540??
Ingenic SemiconductorJZ4780SGX540??
Samsung2010Exynos 3110SGX540200 MHz3.2
Samsung2010S5PC110SGX540200 MHz3.2
SamsungS5PC111SGX540200 MHz3.2
SamsungS5PV210SGX540??
Texas InstrumentsQ1 2011OMAP 4430SGX540307 MHz4.9
Texas InstrumentsQ1 2011OMAP 4460SGX540384 MHz6.1
IntelQ1 2013Atom Z2420SGX540400 MHz6.4
Actions SemiconductorATM7021SGX540500 MHz8.0
Actions SemiconductorATM7021ASGX540500 MHz8.0
Actions SemiconductorATM7029BSGX540500 MHz8.0
RockchipRK3168SGX540600 MHz9.6
AppleNovember 13, 2014Apple S1 SGX543??
AppleMarch 11, 2011Apple A5 SGX543 MP2200 MHz12.8
AppleMarch 2012Apple A5 SGX543 MP2250 MHz16.0
MediaTekMT5327SGX543 MP2400 MHz25.6
RenesasR-Car H1 SGX543 MP2??
AppleSeptember 12, 2012Apple A6 SGX543 MP3250 MHz24.0
AppleMarch 7, 2012Apple A5X SGX543 MP4250 MHz32.0
SonyCXD53155GG SGX543 MP4+41-222 MHz5.248-28.416
ST-EricssonNova A9540SGX544??
NovaThor L9540SGX544??
NovaThor L8540SGX544500 MHz16
NovaThor L8580SGX544600 MHz19.2
MediaTekJuly 2013MT6589MSGX544156 MHz5
MediaTekMT8117SGX544156 MHz5
MediaTekMT8121SGX544156 MHz5
MediaTekMarch 2013MT6589SGX544286 MHz9.2
MediaTekMT8389SGX544286 MHz9.2
MediaTekMT8125SGX544300 MHz9.6
MediaTekJuly 2013MT6589TSGX544357 MHz11.4
Texas InstrumentsQ2 2012OMAP 4470SGX544384 MHz13.8
BroadcomBroadcom M320SGX544??
BroadcomBroadcom M340SGX544??
Actions SemiconductorATM7039SGX544450 MHz16.2
AllwinnerAllwinner A31SGX544 MP2300 MHz19.2
AllwinnerAllwinner A31SSGX544 MP2300 MHz19.2
IntelQ2 2013Atom Z2520SGX544 MP2300 MHz21.6
IntelQ2 2013Atom Z2560SGX544 MP2400 MHz25.6
IntelQ2 2013Atom Z2580SGX544 MP2533 MHz34.1
Texas InstrumentsQ2 2013OMAP 5430SGX544 MP2533 MHz34.1
Texas InstrumentsQ2 2013OMAP 5432SGX544 MP2533 MHz34.1
Texas InstrumentsQ4 2018Sitara AM6528
Sitara AM6548
SGX544
AllwinnerAllwinner A83TSGX544 MP2700 MHz44.8
AllwinnerAllwinner H8SGX544 MP2700 MHz44.8
SamsungQ2 2013Exynos 5410SGX544 MP3533 MHz51.1
IntelAtom Z2460SGX545533 MHz8.5
IntelAtom Z2760SGX545533 MHz8.5
IntelAtom CE5310SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5315SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5318SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5320SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5328SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5335SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5338SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5343SGX545??
IntelAtom CE5348SGX545??
AppleOctober 23, 2012Apple A6X SGX554 MP4300 MHz76.8
AppleSeptember, 2016Apple S1P, Apple S2 Series6 ??
RockchipRK3368G6110600 MHz38.4
MediaTekQ1 2014MT6595MG6200 450 MHz57.6
MediaTekMT8135G6200 450 MHz57.6
MediaTekQ4 2014Helio X10 G6200 550 MHz70.4
MediaTekQ4 2014Helio X10 G6200
MediaTekQ1 2014MT6595G6200 600 MHz76.8
MediaTekQ1 2014MT6795G6200 700 MHz89.5
LGQ1 2012LG H13G6200 600 MHz76.8
AllwinnerAllwinner A80G6230 533 MHz68.0
AllwinnerAllwinner A80TG6230 533 MHz68.0
Actions SemiconductorATM9009G6230 600 MHz76.8
MediaTekQ1 2015MT8173GX6250 700 MHz89.6
MediaTekQ1 2016MT8176GX6250 600 MHz76.8
IntelQ1 2014Atom Z3460G6400 533 MHz136.4
IntelQ1 2014Atom Z3480G6400 533 MHz136.4
RenesasR-Car H2 G6400 600 MHz153.6
RenesasR-Car H3 GX6650 600 MHz230.4
AppleSeptember 10, 2013Apple A7 G6430 450 MHz115.2
IntelQ2 2014Atom Z3530G6430 457 MHz117
IntelQ2 2014Atom Z3560G6430 533 MHz136.4
IntelQ3 2014Atom Z3570G6430 533 MHz136.4
IntelQ2 2014Atom Z3580G6430 533 MHz136.4
AppleSeptember 9, 2014Apple A8 GX6450 533 MHz136.4
AppleOctober 16, 2014Apple A8X GX6850 533 MHz272.9
AppleSeptember 9, 2015Apple A9 Series7XT GT7600 600 MHz230.4
AppleSeptember 9, 2015Apple A9X Series7XT GT7800 >652 MHz>500
AppleSeptember 7, 2016Apple A10 Fusion Series7XT GT7600 Plus 900 MHz345.6
Spreadtrum2017SC9861G-IASeries7XT GT7200
MediaTekQ1 2017Helio X30 Series7XT GT7400 Plus 800 MHz204.8
AppleJune 5, 2017Apple A10X Series7XT GT7600 Plus >912 MHz>700
Socionext2017SC1810Series8XE
Synaptics2017Berlin BG5CTSeries8XE GE8310
Mediatek2017MT6739Series8XE GE8100
Mediatek2017MT8167Series8XE GE8300
Mediatek2018Helio P22Series8XE GE8320
Mediatek2018Helio A22Series8XE GE8320
Mediatek2018Helio P35Series8XE GE8320
Renesas2017R-Car D3 Series8XE GE8300
Unisoc 2018SC9863ASeries8XE GE8322
Unisoc Q1 2019Tiger T310Series8XE GE8300
Mediatek2018Helio P90Series9XM GM9446
UnisocQ3 2019Tiger T710Series9XM GM9446