A brand new unreleased Core Extremely 200S collection product has hit the Geekbench browser. Benchleaks on X shared a Geekbench results of the upcoming mid-range Core Extremely 5 225F 10-core chip, with efficiency numbers just like Intel’s Core i5-13600 Raptor Lake CPU.
The Core Extremely 5 225F reached a single-core results of 2,653 factors and a multi-core results of 13,028 factors. The CPU is armed with six P-cores, 4 E-cores, 20MB of L3 cache, and a purported max frequency of 4.887GHz in the course of the Geekbench run.
In comparison with the closest Core Ultra 200S collection CPU obtainable for buy now, the Core Extremely 5 245K, the Extremely 5 225F, the 245K is 16% quicker in single-core efficiency on common and a whopping 44% faster in multi-core. (Common outcomes for the 245K had been taken from the primary web page of user-published ends in the Geekbench browser, leading to a median rating of three,087 factors for single-core and 18,882 factors for multi-core).
[GB6 CPU] Unknown CPUCPU: Intel Core Extremely 5 225F (10C 10T)Min/Max/Avg: 3844/4866/4582 MHzCodename: Arrow LakeCPUID: C0662 (GenuineIntel)Single: 2653Multi: 13028https://t.co/UUpjGH5CtaNovember 25, 2024
CPUs | Single-Core | Multi-Core |
Core Extremely 5 225F | 2,653 | 13,028 |
Core Extremely 5 245K | 3,087 | 18,882 |
Core i5-13600 | 2,516 | 12,375 |
Ryzen 7 9700X | 3,435 | 18,042 |
Ryzen 5 9600X | 3,521 | 16,072 |
The Core i5-13600 is the closest CPU in Geekbench scores to the Core Extremely 5 225F, with 2516 factors within the single-core take a look at and 12,375 factors within the multi-core take a look at. The Extremely 5 225F is barely quicker than the i5-13600, beating the Raptor Lake chip by 5% in single and multi-core efficiency. Nevertheless, the 225F achieves this feat with 4 fewer cores and simply half the thread depend.
In comparison with the 225F’s direct predecessor, the Core i5-14400F, the 225F is 13% quicker in single and multi-core. Within the AMD camp, the Ryzen 7 9700X is 29% quicker in single-core efficiency and 38% quicker in multi-core efficiency (single common rating of three,435 and common multi-core results of 18,042). The Ryzen 5 9600X is 32% quicker in single-core and 23% quicker in multi-core regardless of having a extreme core depend drawback (with a median single-core results of 3,521 factors and multi-core results of 16,072).
As per normal, take this Geekbench rating with a pinch of salt. Outcomes can differ relying on how the CPU is configured, and we may see a lot quicker outcomes sooner or later, particularly since Intel revealed severe efficiency points with Arrow Lake that might be rectified in a future firmware (or collection of firmware) replace(s).