Semiconductor Software Giant Redirects Resources Toward Higher-Margin AI Chip Development
Synopsys, one of the world’s leading semiconductor design software companies, is discontinuing a suite of manufacturing process control products used by major chipmakers as it shifts engineering resources toward higher-growth AI chip design technologies.
The decision affects software including Equipment Engineering System (EES) and Fault Detection and Classification (FDC) tools, which help semiconductor factories monitor equipment performance, identify manufacturing problems, and improve production efficiency.
Major Chipmakers Informed of Product Wind-Down
Synopsys informed more than 10 semiconductor customers about the “end-of-life” decision earlier this year, according to people familiar with the matter.
Affected customers include:
- Samsung Electronics
- SK Hynix
- Kioxia Holdings
- Qorvo
- Other global semiconductor manufacturers
Under the transition plan:
- No new software versions will be developed
- Existing contracts will continue receiving maintenance support
- Customers will need to plan alternative solutions after support periods expire
Shift Toward AI-Driven Chip Design
The move reflects a broader strategic change at Synopsys as demand grows for AI-related semiconductor tools.
The company is prioritizing:
- AI-assisted chip design
- Automated engineering workflows
- Advanced electronic design automation (EDA)
- AI agents that can accelerate chip development
Synopsys has argued that AI will transform semiconductor creation by helping engineers design increasingly complex chips faster and more efficiently.
Manufacturing Software Faced Competitive Challenges
The discontinued products originated from Synopsys’ 2021 acquisition of South Korean semiconductor software company BISTel.
However, the business faced several challenges:
- Chipmakers increasingly developed internal manufacturing control systems
- Improving the software required access to highly confidential factory data
- Customers became less dependent on external manufacturing monitoring tools
Some semiconductor companies preferred maintaining proprietary control over their production data and factory optimization systems.
Potential Impact on Semiconductor Production
Some industry sources warned that reducing external support for manufacturing control software could create risks for chip production efficiency.
Possible concerns include:
- Reduced software updates
- Slower optimization of manufacturing processes
- Potential impact on production yields
However, other industry participants said major chipmakers already have alternatives and do not expect significant disruption.
Samsung said it had established compatible alternatives and expected no negative impact on production from the transition.
AI Chip Boom Reshapes Semiconductor Industry
Synopsys’ decision reflects a wider transformation across the semiconductor sector.
AI demand is driving investment into:
- Advanced chip architectures
- Custom AI accelerators
- Automated design systems
- High-performance computing
Companies across the semiconductor value chain are reallocating resources toward technologies expected to benefit from the AI infrastructure boom.
Ansys Acquisition Strengthens AI Strategy
The restructuring follows Synopsys’ $35 billion acquisition of engineering software company Ansys, a deal designed to create a broader simulation and design platform.
The combined capabilities are intended to support:
- Digital engineering models
- AI-enhanced design workflows
- Faster product development cycles across industries
The acquisition also increased pressure on Synopsys to streamline operations and focus investment on strategic growth areas.
Looking Ahead
Synopsys’ exit from semiconductor factory control software marks a significant strategic pivot from the manufacturing side of chip production toward the design side.
As AI drives demand for increasingly complex processors, Synopsys is betting that the biggest opportunities will come from helping companies create the next generation of chips rather than managing factory operations.
The move highlights a broader industry trend: AI is not only increasing demand for semiconductors — it is also reshaping the software tools used to build them.






