Intel Lunar Lake CPU at 17W Offers 50% Multi-Threaded Performance Uplift Over Meteor Lake 15W

Hassan Mujtaba
Intel Lunar Lake CPUs To Be Available In Limited Supply In Late 2024, Volume Not Expected Until 2025 1
Image Source: Wccftech (AI-Generated)

Intel Lunar Lake CPUs will reportedly offer a major boost in multi-threaded performance with their new P-Core & E-Core architecture.

Intel Lunar Lake CPUs With Lion Cove P-Cores Lack Hyper-Threading Support But Deliver 50% Higher Multi-Threaded Performance Than Meteor Lake

The latest information on Intel's Lunar Lake CPUs comes from Bionic_Squash who has teased the multi-threaded performance of the upcoming low-power CPU platform. The Lunar Lake CPUs are targeted at thin and light laptops with a focus on higher performance per watt and faster AI NPU performance. The chips are expected to feature the Lion Cove P-Core, Skymont E-Core architecture, and a brand new NPU that delivers 3x the performance gain over Meteor Lake.

Related Story Intel Revives Raptor Lake Again With Core 7 230H And Core 5 205H, But Strips Out The Integrated Graphics Entirely

Now let's talk about the performance being shared. The Lunar Lake CPU used for comparison is a 17W SKU and is said to have no hyper-threading support. For comparison, a Meteor Lake-U (15W) chip was used which features 2 P-cores, 8 E-Cores, and 2 LP-E cores for a total of 12 cores and 14 threads. Based on previous information that we have reported, Lunar Lake CPUs will come with up to 4 P-Cores and 4 E-Cores so that's 8 cores and 8 threads.

There are no specific SKU details but it is mentioned that the 17W TDP was the original PL1 spec for the single-fan configurations based on Lunar Lake CPUs. Intel is said to have extended the cTDP up to 30W following popular demand from OEMs. But here, the 17W TDP was used for comparisons.

Image Source: zhihu

Some of the most popular multi-threaded CPU benchmarks were used such as Cinebench 23, Geek Bench 5, and Geek Bench 4.5. It is stated that the Intel Lunar Lake CPUs reached almost 50% multi-threaded performance versus the Meteor Lake CPUs which is a huge increase despite Lunar Lake chips having almost half the number of threads. This may give us a hint of the performance packed within the new Lion Cove and Skymont cores with the former also heading to Arrow Lake CPUs for desktops and notebooks later this year.

Following are some of the features of Lunar Lake CPUs:

  • Designed For Thin & Light Notebooks
  • Lion Cove P-Cores & Skymont E-Cores
  • Battlemage "Xe2-LPG" GPU Architecture
  • 4+4 Core Configurations (MX-Series)
  • Up To 64 Execution Units
  • On-Package LPDDR5x Memory
  • Up To 3x Faster NPU Performance Versus Meteor Lake
  • Late 2024 Launch, 2025 Volume

Intel's Lunar Lake CPUs will be rolling out later this year in limited quantities with mass availability in early 2025. Besides the CPU and NPU side, the chips will be the first to incorporate the next-gen Xe2 "Battlemage" graphics architecture on the iGPU Tile, offering a major 2x performance uplift vs the existing Xe1 "Alchemist" architecture. Intel will also talk about its future client CPU families at Computex 2024 so we might hear more about these chips in June.

Intel Mobility CPU Lineup:

CPU FamilyPanther LakeLunar LakeArrow LakeMeteor LakeRaptor LakeAlder Lake
Process Node (CPU Tile)Intel 18ATSMC N3BTSMC N3BIntel 4Intel 7Intel 7
Process Node (GPU Tile)TSMC N3E / Intel 3TSMC N3BTSMC 5nmTSMC 5nmIntel 7Intel 7
CPU ArchitectureHybridHybrid (Dual-Core)Hybrid (Triple-Core)Hybrid (Triple-Core)Hybrid (Dual-Core)Hybrid (Dual-Core)
P-Core ArchitectureCougar CoveLion CoveLion CoveRedwood CoveRaptor CoveGolden Cove
E-Core ArchitectureDarkmontN/ASkymontCrestmontGracemontGracemont
LP E-Core Architecture (SOC)DarkmontSkymontCrestmontCrestmontN/AN/A
Top Configuration (Compute Tile)4+8 (H-Series)4+4 (MX Series)6+8 (H-Series)
2+8 (U-Series)
6+8 (H-Series)
2+8 (U-Series)
6+8 (H-Series)
8+16 (HX-Series)
6+8 (H-Series)
8+8 (HX-Series)
Max Cores / Threads16/168/814/1414/2014/2014/20
AI NPUNPU5 (50 TOPS)NPU4 (48 TOPS)NPU3.5 (13 TOPS)NPU3 (11 TOPS)NPU2 (7 TOPS)NPU2 (7 TOPS)
Planned LineupCore Ultra 300Core Ultra 200VCore Ultra 200Core Ultra 10014th/13th Gen12th Gen
GPU ArchitectureXe3-LPG (Battlemage)Xe2-LPG (Battlemage)Xe-LPG+ (Alchemist)Xe-LPG (Alchemist)Iris Xe (Gen 12)Iris Xe (Gen 12)
Xe Cores (Max)12 Xe3 Cores8 Xe2 Cores8 Xe Cores8 Xe Cores96 EUs (768 Cores)96 EUs (768 Cores)
Memory SupportLPDDR5X-9600LPDDR5X-8533DDR5-5600
LPDDR5-7500
LPDDR5X-8533
DDR5-5600
LPDDR5-7400
LPDDR5X - 7400+
DDR5-5200
LPDDR5-5200
LPDDR5-6400
DDR5-4800
LPDDR5-5200
LPDDR5X-4267
Memory Capacity (Max)128 GB32 GB128 GB96 GB64 GB64 GB
Thunderbolt SupportTB5TB5TB5TB4TB4TB4
WiFi CapabilityWiFi 7WiFi 7WiFi 7WiFi 6EWiFi 6EWiFi 6E
TDP17-45W17-30WTBD7W-45W15-55W15-55W
Launch2H 20252H 20242H 20242H 20231H 20231H 2022
Which 2024 Intel CPU family are you looking forward to the most?
Hassan Mujtaba Photo

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech's Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

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