Folks bear in mind that the area shrink is going to be massive. 7SoC with 6T is optimized for designs running at 3.5 Ghz. At 14LPP to hit > 3 Ghz you needed 9T libraries . 7.5T was only for mobile CPUs running in the 2 - 2.4 Ghz range.
https://www.globalfoundries.com/sites/default/files/product-briefs/product-brief-14lpp.pdf
https://www.semiwiki.com/forum/cont...alfoundries-discloses-7nm-process-detail.html
Cell Height = Minimum Metal Pitch x Track count
Contacted Poly Pitch x Cell Height is the new measure for transistor density
14LPP = 78nm x 64 nm x 9 tracks = 44928
7SoC = 56nm x 40nm x 6 tracks = 13440
13440/44928 = 0.299 or 0.3. Thats a 70% area shrink from 14LPP 9T. A single full node generation shrink will take you from 1 to 0.5 and another full node would take you to 0.25. 7SoC with 6T is literally bringing close to 2 generations of density increase. 7SoC 6T vs 14LPP 9T comparison by GF shows a 60% power reduction at iso perf or 40% perf increase at iso power.
https://m.eet.com/content/images/eetimes/1 7 12 14 copared x 800_1505972923.jpg
AMD should be able to pack 64 Zen 2 cores while doubling L3 cache per core and still should be able to keep die size <= 200 sq mm. I think AMD knows they have an opportunity to take a decisive lead in servers and are going for the kill. Intel EMIB and 10++ will arrive with server first in 2020 (most probably H2) and Icelake-SP is not going to be able to bring 64 cores to market in 2019. If AMD can launch Rome with 64 cores in Q1 2019 they will catch Intel totally off guard.