AMD and Intel both are reportedly testing the new 12V-2Γ6 connectors which may power their next-gen GPUs, according to Hungarian publication Prohardver (via Wccftech).
12V-2Γ6 For RDNA4 & Battlemage?

In case you arenβt familiar, the 12V-2Γ6 is the evolution of the original 12VHPWR connector that, while advertised to deliver up to 600 watts of power through a single cable, had a less-than-stellar safety record due to various reports of melted connectors and fire risks. The updated connector reportedly has enhanced safety features that prevents meltdowns from occurring if it comes loose, which is especially important for NVIDIAβs upcoming flagship GPU.
Prohardver reported that both Team Red and Team Blue are testing the new connector with manufacturing partners, though itβs unclear if this ultimately means their upcoming products will feature this design. Itβs worth noting that it ultimately may not be required for both companies, as Intel has no intention of designing a high-end GPU with power-guzzling TDP figures, and AMD for the time being has put aside its flagship-rivaling ambitions. Instead, both companies can stick to the tried-and-true dual PCIe 8-pin design.
That being said, itβs possible that both companies will implement this connector in the far future, especially as both RDNA4 and Battlemage are likely in a very late phase of development, which may not see further changes on the connector at this point. Itβs worth noting that AIBs like ASRock has unofficially implemented the 12V-2Γ6 connector in its blower fan-based GPUs, which is useful thanks to its space-saving characteristics.
Pokdepinion: Unless the next-gen uses more than 300 watts, I donβt see many reasons to implement the connector (and ATX 3.1 PSUs arenβt quite as common just yet).
