Skip to main content

Intel launches the world’s first 16-core mobile CPU

Intel launched a new range of processors at its Vision event on Tuesday, May 10. The new 55W HX-series CPUs are part of Intel’s 12th-gen family, and they’re built to deliver the highest performance possible in a mobile form factor, at least according to Intel.

The flagship Core i9-12950HX lends some credibility to the claim of being the first 16-core laptop CPU ever. Like other 12th-gen Alder Lake processors, it splits the cores across performance and efficient cores, and the chip can boost up to 5GHz. Like other HX-series processors, it comes with a 55-watt power limit, as well.

Specs for Intel HX-series processors.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

As you can see in the spec sheet above, Intel isn’t only focusing on flagships with the range. The Core i5-12450HX still has access to 55W to power a 4.4GHz max boost clock and eight cores. This class of mobile CPU seems positioned to compete with AMD’s recently announced Dragon Range chips.

For performance, Intel says the new chips provide up to a 17% improvement in single-thread performance and up to a 64% improvement in multi-thread performance compared to last-gen’s Core i9-11980HK. These are Intel’s first-party benchmarks, and as always, we recommend waiting for third-party benchmarks before drawing firm conclusions.

Performance for Intel HX-series processors.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Intel didn’t provide comparative data for gaming, though the company said the Core i9-12900HX is capable of delivering up to 128 fps in Far Cry 6 and up to 149 fps in Forza Horizon 5 when paired with a mobile RTX 3080 Ti. Gaming performance in laptops largely comes down to the individual machine, however, so we recommend sticking with dedicated laptop reviews instead of Intel’s benchmarks.

The new chips come with a boost in core count, but also new platform features. These include support for DDR4 and DDR5 memory, including Error Correcting Code (ECC) memory, as well as support for PCIe 5.0. Multiple chips support Intel vPro, as well, bringing ISV certification to apps like Adobe Premiere Pro and AutoCAD.

Like Intel’s previous mobile flagship, the Core i9-12900HK, the new chips support memory and core overclocking. You can manually tune the efficient and performance cores, as well as overclock memory and store the setup in an XMP 3.0 profile. Although all of the new chips support overclocking, some have “limited core OC,” as noted in the chart above. We have reached out to Intel to clarify what is limited on these chips.

Intel is stressing the importance of I/O in the new chips compared to its H-series processors. The chips support up to eight SATA 3.0 connections, 14 USB 2.0 and 10 USB 3.0 connections, and two discrete Thunderbolt controllers. This is enabled by the larger size of HX-series processors, which are nearly as large as Intel’s 12th-gen desktop chips.

HX chips should be arriving soon, but Intel didn’t announce a firm release date. The company still showed off multiple machines arriving with the new chips, including the Lenovo Legion 7, MSI GE77 Raider, and Dell Prevision 7670.

Editors' Recommendations

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
With the arrival of Core Ultra, a new era for Intel has begun
A tray of Intel Core Ultra CPUs.

Intel's Meteor Lake processors represent more than just a new generation. It's a fresh start for Intel -- a cycle it seems to find itself in every few years -- and the birth of the AI PC. Most importantly, it's a sign that Intel can deliver on its road map with a fresh generation of processors built on a new node.

Meteor Lake ushers in the Intel 4 node, which we first heard about nearly three years ago with the launch of 11th-gen CPUs. It also marka the start of the Core Ultra era of CPUs, along with a consolidation of Intel's massive mobile CPU lineup. Now, processors fit into two camps: U-series for thin and light laptops, and H-series for more powerful machines.

Read more
Here’s how the M3 Max chip compares to the most powerful Windows laptops
The 14-inch MacBook Pro with M3 Max chip seen from behind.

Apple's M3 Max is an incredibly powerful chip, significantly increasing Apple Silicon's CPU and GPU performance. It's gotten a ton of press, but is it necessarily faster than the fastest Windows laptops?

To find out, we pitted it against the Lenovo Legion 9i, a gaming laptop equipped with the ultrafast Intel Core i9-13980HX and Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090, and the Asus ROG Strix Scar 17 with the AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX and the RTX 4090. We can't compare the MacBook Pro 14 with the M3 Max directly to the Lenovo and Asus in that many benchmarks, particularly gaming, due to limits in testing and cross-platform compatibility. But we could compare enough to get an idea of how these various chips stack up against each other.
A brief look at architectures
The Apple M3 Max is an ARM-based system on a chip (SoC) currently at the high end of Apple Silicon's lineup. It represents the first chips made using a 3nm process and redesigned GPU architecture. On the CPU side, Apple increased the speed of its performance cores by 15% and its efficiency cores by 30% over the M2. Overall, Apple is promising a 20% to 25% improvement in performance. On the GPU side, Dynamic Caching is one technology that speeds up a variety of GPU processes, while gamers will benefit from mesh shading and hardware-accelerated ray tracing.

Read more
I tested Intel’s new overclocking tool, and it does AI all wrong
Intel's 14900K CPU socketed in a motherboard.

One of the most interesting features of Intel's recent Core i9-14900K is its AI-assisted overclocking. Available through the Extreme Tuning Utility (XTU), AI Assist is billed as the natural next step of automatic overclocking. It uses AI to push chips further rather than relying on a predetermined list of checks that Intel already offers through XTU.

That's the pitch, at least. But according to my own testing, AI Assist doesn't do much of anything.

Read more