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Intel Desktop Meteor Lake-S CPUs To Feature Up To 22 Cores, Arrow Lake-S Up To 24 Cores


bonami2

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Based on the leaked slides, it looks like Intel's 14th Gen Meteor Lake-S Desktop CPUs will take a step back and reduce the number of P-Cores while retaining the number of E-Cores. The lineup listed in the charts includes five different SKU configurations with the top variants featuring up to 22 cores in a combination of 6 P-Cores and 16 E-Cores. The P-Cores on the Meteor Lake CPUs are based on the brand-new Redwood Cove architecture while the E-Cores will utilize the Crestmont design. Both of these are new and improved architecture as reported by Coelacanth-Dream a few days back. The full list of configurations includes:

Meteor Lake-S 22 (6P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 125W TDP

Meteor Lake-S 22 (6P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 65W TDP

Meteor Lake-S 22 (6P + 16E) / 4 Xe Cores / 35W TDP

Meteor Lake-S 14 (6P + 8E) / 4 Xe Cores / 65WTDP

Meteor Lake-S 14 (6P + 8E) / 4 Xe Cores / 35WTDP

 

WCCFTECH.COM

Intel's 14th Gen Meteor Lake-S & 15th Gen Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPU SKUs have been detailed for the next-gen LGA 1851 socket platform.

 

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It makes sense to me. For gaming at least, just having a few cores with really good single threaded performance is totally fine. If they raise the floor on E core performance a bit and reduce the number of P cores, overall performance should be about even or maybe even a bit higher while also potentially bringing down power consumption, or maybe overall cost, or both. 

 

The S22 35w could be really interesting, 35w for a 22 core chip sounds almost too good to be true. 

Edited by UltraMega
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2 hours ago, UltraMega said:

It makes sense to me. For gaming at least, just having a few cores with really good single threaded performance is totally fine. If they raise the floor on E core performance a bit and reduce the number of P cores, overall performance should be about even or maybe even a bit higher while also potentially bringing down power consumption, or maybe overall cost, or both. 

 

The S22 35w could be really interesting, 35w for a 22 core chip sounds almost too good to be true. 

I can only agree with you. That why i got the 13900k. I wanted the best Floating point and multithreading and it did work in BEAM NG game Benchmark.

 

The engine like most of them run most of the stuff on the first few thread then those core scale it to multiple other thread. 

 

So Floating point in the first 2-6 core is mostly all it needed to scale it further 😁

Edited by bonami2

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MOTHERBOARD: MSI MPG Z790i EDGE
CPU: Intel 13900k + Top Mounted 280mm Aio
RAM: 2x24gb Gskill 6400 cl36-48-48 1.4v
PSU: Cooler Master V850 SFX Gold White Edition
GPU: UHD ULTRA EXTREME BANANA GRAPHIC
MONITOR: [Monitor] LG CX48 OLED [VR] Samsung HMD Odyssey Plus OLED + Meta Quest 2 120hz
CASE: CoolerMaster NR200P White Mini ITX
SSD/NVME: 2TB Intel 660p 1tb sn850 1tb sn770
Full Rig Info

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CPU: Asus Strix G15 AE 6800m 5900hx 32gb ram 1440p
RAM: MSI GT60 Dominator 870m 4800MQ
GPU: Alienware M11x R2 i7 640um Nvidia 335m 8gb Ram
MONITOR: Lenovo X270 1080p i7 7600u 16gb ram
SSD/NVME: Acer Chromebook 11.6
Full Rig Info

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CPU: Ryzen 5560u
MOTHERBOARD: Beelink SER5 Mini PC Box
RAM: 2x32gb Sodimm
CASE: Jonsbo N1 Mini ITX
HDD: 8TB + 4TB HDD + 2 x Intel DC S3500 800GB
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