Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Evergreens

Intel Lunar Lake CPUs: everything we know about release date, performance, and specs

Add as a preferred source on Google
An Intel Core Ultra Series 2 chip embedded in a piece of glass.
Kunal Khullar / Digital Trends

You and I might be hotly anticipating what Intel’s next-generation Arrow Lake processors will do later this year, but Intel’s mobile-first Lunar Lake may be the more exciting design. It’s certainly the one Intel seems more keen to talk about. It released a heap of new information on Lunar Lake, detailing what could be one of Intel’s most exciting product launches in years.

It’s bringing real efficiency back to its mobile product, and that could give AMD a lot to think about. Here’s everything we know about Lunar Lake so far, which are are gunning for a spot in the best laptops.

Recommended Videos

Lunar Lake specs

Intel revealed some details about Lunar Lake’s architecture and design in May 2024, stating that this mobile-first architectural design would be fast, but also incredibly efficient, beating the competition by up to 30% on power draw while offering competitive performance.

Intel Lunar Lake slide.
This slide shows some interesting possible details about Lunar Lake’s design. Intel/YuuKi-AnS/Twitter

After getting more details about Lunar Lake at Computex in June, we now know that Intel is achieving its promises of greater performance and increased efficiency thanks to a larger focus on its efficiency (E) cores. Based on a newly designed Skymont architecture, these efficiency cores will shoulder much more of the load in Lunar Lake processors.

The main makeup of Lunar Lake will be four Lion Cove performance cores and four Skymont E cores. Intel detailed the full range of processors at IFA 2024, which you can see specs for below.

The Intel Core Ultra 200V series SKUs chart.
Intel

Lunar Lake will also come with Xe2 graphics onboard. That will be able to deliver up to 60 TOPS themselves, but are more designed with gaming in mind. These are the GPUs that will eventually make it into Intel’s Battlemage graphics cards, but for now should offer impressive performance for casual gaming that could make entry-level GPUs redundant. This performance leap reportedly comes from new native support for the ExecuteIndirect command, which is very often utilized in DX12 games. There’s also a new compression technique, and faster clearing of cache for better overall efficiency.

Intel keynote.
Intel

Lunar Lake does drop hyper-threading, as the rumors suggested, and it’s going to be built on a TSMC N3 processor for the compute tile and the N6 node for the platform tile. This is the first time in a while that Intel hasn’t made its own process node, but that’s because its own fabrication is skipping ahead to the 18A node.

As for features, Lunar Lake will support PCI-Express 5, Thunderbolt 4 and USB4, HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 2.1, Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4, and Gigabit Ethernet. The new chips will also support up to 32GB of LPDDR5X for faster memory performance.

Lunar Lake release date

Lunar Lake was officially launched on September 3, 2024, but as new CPU releases typically go, there weren’t any products available at that time. Intel says partners will release laptops on September 24, and it has designs available from Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, MSI, and Samsung. Undoubtedly, we’ll see more designs as time goes on. We’ve already seen a few new designs, such as the updated Dell XPS 13.

Lunar Lake performance

Despite its target of lower-power laptops, Intel’s Lunar Lake is allegedly a seriously powerful design. The first ground-up architectural overhaul in a few generations, Lunar Lake will continue to leverage Intel’s Foveros technology for bigger performance and smaller efficiency cores. Dropping hyper-threading reportedly won’t slow it down, though, as early reports suggested that Lunar Lake could offer performance close to 1.5 times that of Meteor Lake processors at a very comparable power draw.

Intel backed up these claims, promising a more than 50% performance-per-watt improvement in the Lion Cove P cores, and between 20% and 80% generational improvement from the Skymont E cores. Compared with Meteor Lake E cores, the new Skymont design can reportedly deliver up to twice the performance, or work at as little as a third of the power draw while delivering Meteor Lake-like performance, for much greater efficiency and improved battery life.

Performance for Skymont cores compared to Meteor Lake.
Intel

This reportedly shakes out to around a 2% instructions-per-clock improvement over Intel’s Raptor Cove P core design, meaning the new Skymont E core architecture is faster per clock than a much-bigger P core. That’s a lot of added performance. That comes from added cache, a new process node, and big efficiency improvements in the architectural design, as well as support for more, faster memory.

Intel will be able to utilize a new process node to eke out some extra performance or efficiency, depending on what it’s targeting. It won’t use its internal process nodes, though, and will instead be based on TSMCs 3nm 3NB process.

AI performance will also be a major factor in Lunar Lake’s release, with Intel stating that Lunar Lake’s redesigned neural processor will handle up to 45 TOPS. That’s competitive with the neural processing unit (NPU) in the Snapdragon X Elite, but Intel’s not stopping there. Lunar Lake’s Xe 2 GPU will be able to handle up to 60 trillion calculations per second, too, giving the total chip over 100 TOPS.

Performance improvements for Intel Xe2 graphics.
Intel

Gaming performance will be much improved, too. Frame rates and efficiency will be far higher with Lunar Lake, making it great for casual gaming laptops.

This is all based on Intel releases, and some slightly ague charts and graphics, so keep your skeptic’s hat on for now until we get our hands on these chips ourselves. But the performance promises are tantalizing indeed and raise some real questions about how well AMD’s Ryzen AI 300 processors will be able to hold up — read our Zenbook S 16 review to see those chips in action.

It’s still all to play for

For a CPU design that Intel claims will launch before the end of 2024, we still don’t have much beyond promises. They’re strong promises, but promises nonetheless. Thankfully, it shouldn’t be long before we have Lunar Lake CPUs in hand, allowing us to see if Intel’s promises hold any weight.

Regardless, Lunar Lake is a radical departure for Intel. It’s an example of the company abandoning its core design tenets in order to make something that’s truly competitive. Hopefully that pays off.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
Topics
ChatGPT’s new search tool saves you from digging through old chats, files, and images
You can also filter ChatGPT search results by content type.
chatgpt-new-search

If you have ever lost a great ChatGPT answer somewhere in your endless chat history, that headache is finally over. OpenAI has rolled out a major search upgrade that lets you find old chats, projects, documents, and images all from one place.

Before this update, the sidebar search only pulled up past conversations, leaving uploaded files, projects, and generated images completely out of reach. The new search option is now available across web, iOS, and Android, on every ChatGPT plan, including free accounts.

Read more
You can now link your favorite apps to AI Mode in Google Search to get things done
AI Mode now works with Instacart, Canva, and YouTube Music inside Search.
google-search-ai-mode-connect-apps

Google is making AI Mode in Search more useful by letting you connect third-party apps. Starting this week in the US, you can securely connect some of your go-to apps directly to AI Mode, letting Search actually complete tasks for you instead of just answering questions.

This update builds on a similar trick Google already pulled off inside the Gemini app, and now it is landing in Search itself. The initial rollout includes three launch partners, Instacart, Canva, and YouTube Music, with Google saying more app integrations are on the way.

Read more
You can now edit videos in Google Vids by simply describing the changes
Gemini Omni powers Google Vids’ new editing tools, and personal avatars are joining too
Google Vids gets Gemini Omni

Google is bringing Gemini Omni and personal avatars to Google Vids, expanding the app’s AI-powered video creation tools for paid users. Gemini Omni can now generate and edit clips through natural language, while personal avatars let users appear in videos without recording themselves on camera.

Vids already offered Veo-powered video generation, AI presenters, screen recording, and tools for turning Slides presentations into narrated videos. Omni expands that setup into a more complete editing workflow, where users can keep refining a clip through conversation instead of rebuilding it after every change.

Read more