Intel Nova Lake-S Desktop CPU SKUs Leak: Up To 52 Cores With 16 P-Cores, 32 E-Cores & 150W TDP, Entry-Level SKUs With 12 Cores

Gubaldo

Member
Information regarding upcoming Intel Nova Lake-S CPU configurations has been leaked by Chi11eddog. According to the leaker, motherboard makers are very early in the development of their next-gen platforms, which will feature the LGA 1854 socket and 900-series PCH. These boards will feature next-gen technologies and support for really fast memory, with CUDIMM once again taking center stage as the memory of choice for those who want to extract the most performance out of their PCs.

  • Core Ultra 9 - 16 P-Cores + 32 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (150W)
  • Core Ultra 7 - 14 P-Cores + 24 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (150W)
  • Core Ultra 5 - 8 P-Cores + 16 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (125W)
  • Core Ultra 5 - 8 P-Cores + 12 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (125W)
  • Core Ultra 5 - 6 P-Cores + 8 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (125W)
  • Core Ultra 3 - 4 P-Cores + 8 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (65W)
  • Core Ultra 3 - 4 P-Cores + 4 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (65W)



High time intel gave some competition
 
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& 150W TDP

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So 500W then?
 
Information regarding upcoming Intel Nova Lake-S CPU configurations has been leaked by Chi11eddog. According to the leaker, motherboard makers are very early in the development of their next-gen platforms, which will feature the LGA 1854 socket and 900-series PCH. These boards will feature next-gen technologies and support for really fast memory, with CUDIMM once again taking center stage as the memory of choice for those who want to extract the most performance out of their PCs.

  • Core Ultra 9 - 16 P-Cores + 32 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (150W)
  • Core Ultra 7 - 14 P-Cores + 24 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (150W)
  • Core Ultra 5 - 8 P-Cores + 16 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (125W)
  • Core Ultra 5 - 8 P-Cores + 12 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (125W)
  • Core Ultra 5 - 6 P-Cores + 8 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (125W)
  • Core Ultra 3 - 4 P-Cores + 8 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (65W)
  • Core Ultra 3 - 4 P-Cores + 4 E-Cores + 4 LP-E Cores (65W)



High time intel gave some competition
That's some impressive core counts, but does gaming benefit at all from e-cores? From what I can understand, single P-core performance is still what is most important for that time of workload.
 
The whole P and E core thing just makes things far more complicated than it has to be. I also recall some games/app having issues and having to manually adjust which cores to use in order to have decent performance. Why not just have one type of cores and dynamically adjust their clocks based on usage as usual? Simple, elegant and it works. Feels like waste of silicon to me. Definitely going AMD for my next build.
 
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