Skip to main content

Intel Meteor Lake is coming to desktop, but there’s a big catch

The Intel Meteor Lake chip.
Intel

It’s been a real roller coaster ride with Intel Meteor Lake. First, it was coming to desktops, then it wasn’t, then it was, and now … it isn’t, but it is. If you’re as confused as we are, don’t worry — Intel has set things straight and we now know that Meteor Lake chips will be available in desktops, but they won’t become some of the best processors for desktop PCs, all because they’re not socketed.

Intel spoke about the future of its 14th-Gen Meteor Lake chips in a statement made to ComputerBase, revealing that, yes, Intel Meteor Lake will come to desktop PCs, but only all-in-one (AIO) computers like the Intel NUC or small form-factor PCs. It won’t be available in socketed form, which means that you won’t be able to install it in a future LGA1851 motherboard. In short, Meteor Lake chips are laptop CPUs, through and through.

Just because the chips were made for laptops doesn’t make them unusable on a desktop, though, which is how we’ll be seeing these chips in premade PCs. The performance remains a mystery, but these computers are often not made to rival top desktop PCs, and their appeal lies in the design and their use cases.

Intel Meteor Lake is going to utilize the Foveros 3D packaging technology, and each chip will feature a four-tile architecture design with a separate compute tile, SOC tile with a neural processing unit (NPU) for AI workloads, a GPU tile, and an IO tile. When Intel announced it on September 19, it only really spoke about laptops, and it’s now perfectly clear why.

The rumors about this lineup have been confusing from the start. Initially, most people expected Intel to launch Meteor Lake for both desktops and laptops, but it was then assumed that it would only appear in notebooks. A recent interview with an Intel executive told us otherwise, though, as she said that the desktop version was coming in 2024. While not entirely false, it also wasn’t true in the way most people assumed because you won’t be able to use Meteor Lake to build a PC.

What about desktops for gaming or workstations, the ones that require a socketed CPU? It appears that Meteor Lake is not happening, but Arrow Lake-S should be coming in the second half of 2024. As expected, the chip will require the new LGA1851 socket, so motherboard upgrades will be in order.

Editors' Recommendations

Monica J. White
Monica is a UK-based freelance writer and self-proclaimed geek. A firm believer in the "PC building is just like expensive…
The first Core Ultra handheld gaming PC is already coming
The OneXPlayer X1 handheld.

OneXPlayer X1

Intel just launched its Core Ultra CPUs, and we're already hearing about a handheld gaming PC packing one of the latest chips. OneXPlayer teased its X1 handheld, which it says is powered by one of Intel's new Meteor Lake CPUs.

Read more
Intel 14th-gen Meteor Lake: architecture, specs, and performance
On-package memory on Intel Meteor Lake processors.

Intel's 14th-gen Meteor Lake processors are here, and they're ready to compete against some of the best processors for laptops. While they don't currently -- and may never -- have desktop counterparts, Meteor Lake chips bring improved graphics performance, AI capabilities, and high core counts to thin and light laptops.

What's new in Meteor Lake, and what will these CPUs excel at? With Intel's announcement, we now know the answers to those questions.
Pricing and release date

Read more
Even Intel’s best chips won’t catch up with Apple, TSMC CEO says
Intel CEO talking about Meteor Lake

You might not know it, but all of Apple’s chips are made by a company called TSMC. They're widely considered to be far more advanced than any chip rival Intel is pumping out at the moment, and now, TSMC has declared that things are going to stay that way.

The comments come after Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger said his company would catch up with Apple’s chips by next year, with the intention of surpassing them in terms of power and efficiency.

Read more