AMD has recently introduced the Ryzen 10 and Ryzen 100 series processors, which are essentially rebranded versions of existing chips. The Ryzen 100 series is based on the Zen3+ architecture, also known as Rembrandt, while the Ryzen 10 series is built on the older Zen2 architecture, also known as Mendocino. This naming strategy further complicates AMD's product lineup, as the company is simultaneously using the Ryzen 9000 series on desktops and offering the Ryzen 300, 200, 100, and 10 series on laptops, each corresponding to different architecture generations. The top-of-the-line Ryzen 7 170 in the Ryzen 100 series features 8 cores and a Radeon 680M graphics card, while the Ryzen 10 series is geared towards entry-level devices such as Chromebooks, with a 4-core processor. This move has sparked confusion among consumers and enthusiasts, who are struggling to keep up with the ever-changing landscape of AMD's mobile processor lineup.