- AMD Ryzen AI Halo is powered by AMD’s ‘Zen 5’-based 16-core Ryzen AI Max+ 395
- It also offers 128GB of unified memory, matching that of the Nvidia DGX Spark.
- With an advertised MSRP of $3,999, it aims to challenge both Nvidia’s offerings and solutions that currently rely on a high-end Apple Mac Mini for localized AI.
AMD is finally ready to launch its Ryzen AI Halo, a compact AI development offering that aims to directly compete with Nvidia’s DGX platform and Apple’s Mac Mini.
The Platform offers a similar memory configuration as above and allows developers to install Windows or Linux as their preferred operating system.
But AMD’s entry comes almost two years after its rivals’ entry, raising the question: is it too little, too late?
A relatively late entry?
The AMD Ryzen AI Halo developer platform was announced by CEO Dr. Lisa Su over 4 months ago during her keynote at CES. It finally received a tentative release date, with pre-orders (exclusive to Microcenter in the US) starting in June of this year.
However, AMD’s response to Nvidia’s dominance in the current AI developer market will come almost five months after its announcement, even as there are already other similarly configured enterprise-class options to fill the void.
All eyes on the DGX Spark
AMD has not competed directly with Nvidia’s DGX Spark since its launch in mid-October 2025, even as it has tapped third-party industry partners like HP (Z2 Mini G1a) and Minisforum (MS-S1 Max) to fill the void.
Despite its late release, Ryzen AI Halo aims to level the playing field for Team Red against Nvidia’s formidable and entrenched offering.
While AMD’s own slides show a slight advantage when it comes to certain AI models, with advantages ranging from 4% to 14% in terms of token generation, while touting support for Windows, a lower power cost per token generated for major LLMs, and an NPU under the hood, things are considerably closer than one might want, all things considered.
Hardware Summary: Ryzen AI Halo vs DGX Spark
AMD’s integrated AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 has a TDP of 120W compared to the Spark’s integrated Nvidia GB10 (140W), even though both units come with a 240W power supply to cover the overheads of their motherboards, SSDs, and cooling.
Both have the same amount of RAM available to users (128GB), and while AMD’s offering comes with Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4 (like the DGX Spark), it only offers a 10GbE Ethernet port compared to Nvidia’s ConnectX NIC which offers speeds of up to 200Gbps, making it ideal for users to connect 2 DGX Sparks together to work with twice the parameters locally compared to AMD’s offering.
The DGX Spark also holds its own against AMD’s offering in terms of raw compute, delivering up to 1 petaFLOP of FP4 compute, compared to AMD’s announced 60 TFLOPs of FP16. It also offers a 4TB configuration for an on-site price of $4,700, doubling the storage AMD currently offers.
Physically, the Ryzen AI Halo is slightly smaller than the DGX Spark, even as both units outsource their power supply requirements to maintain their respective form factors.
A little late?
One could argue that the AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 currently offered by Ryzen AI Halo is a bit disappointing for a release this late in the game.
HP has already been shipping the Z2 Mini G1a to most of its enterprise-class customers, offering a similar configuration: 128GB of unified memory, the same APU, and 2TB of storage, albeit in a much larger form factor than AMD currently offers.
Despite this, AMD’s offering aims to expand the options available to users who were previously looking for a smaller form factor, access to a validated technology stack, or simply the ability to purchase a solution with broader support than similar offerings available on the market.
However, one thing is clear for users who want to run CUDA applications or larger models (>200B parameters): Nvidia’s DGX Spark and its top network still pack a formidable punch that AMD has yet to offer an alternative to, at least in this form factor.
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