Intel Z890 Motherboards To Feature Native Thunderbolt 4 Support, Arrow Lake Desktop CPUs With Up To 4 “Arc Xe-LPG” iGPU Cores

Hassan Mujtaba
Intel Arrow Lake "Core Ultra 200" Desktop CPU QS Samples Rolling Out As Early As August, October Launch Locked In 1

More details regarding the Intel Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPU platform and the Z890 motherboards have been revealed.

Intel Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPUs To Feature Half The iGPU "Xe-LPG" Cores As Meteor Lake, Get Native Thunderbolt 4 Support on Z890 Motherboards

Details regarding Intel's Arrow Lake-S "Core Ultra 200" Desktop CPUs and the respective 800-series platform are starting to take shape. The latest information comes from Golden Pig Upgrade who is talking about the SKUs, the iGPU configurations, and the top Z890 chipset.

Related Story Foxconn & Intel Enter Strategic Partnership To Jointly Develop And Deploy AI Infrastructure And Computing Platforms To Take Advantage Of Booming Demand
Image Source: Anandtech Forums

Starting with the SKUs, the Intel Core Ultra 200 "Arrow Lake-S" Desktop CPUs will be following the first-gen Core Ultra 100 "Meteor Lake" family and start at Core Ultra 5. We have detailed the three possible "Unlocked" SKUs which include the Core Ultra 9 285K, Core Ultra 7 265K, and Core Ultra 5 245K in a previous report here.

Image Source: Golden Pig Upgrade (via Weibo)

It looks like the lineup won't include Core Ultra 3 chips and Intel is likely to keep on selling and refreshing existing Core i3 CPUs to make up for the entry-level demand which is lower than what it seems to be despite having entry-level prices. Intel might offer a refresh with entry-level SKUs on existing LGA 1700 platforms such as the upcoming Bartlett Lake-S Desktop chips.

Image Source: Golden Pig Upgrade (via Weibo)

In terms of iGPU configurations, the Intel Arrow Lake-S "Core Ultra 200" Desktop CPUs will max out at 4 Xe-Cores based on the Alchemist Xe-LPG graphics architecture. These are half the cores versus the top Intel Core Ultra 9 "Meteor Lake" CPUs and certain SKUs are expected to feature 3 and 2 Xe-cores too. If you want to see how these iGPUs perform, you can look into the performance tests of Intel Core Ultra 7 165U/155U for reference as they also come with 4 Xe-core iGPUs.

The clock speed should be higher on the desktop chips due to higher TDPs and should provide decent performance but don't expect a lot. They would certainly not be able to match the top AMD Ryzen 8000G APUs as those already offer competitive and sometimes, even faster, performance than the Meteor Lake top dies with 8 Xe-cores as we tested here.

Image Source: MebiuW (Via Weibo)

As for the cache, it looks like we have another leaker who has pointed out up to 3 MB L3 cache per Lion Cove P-Core. MebiuW suggests that the Lion Cove P-Core will feature a 3 MB L3 cache while the Skymont E-Core cluster comprising of 4 E-Cores will feature 3 MB of L3 cache. This brings the total cache to 36 MB for the top 24 core CPUs (Core Ultra 9 285K), 33 MB for the 20 core CPUs (Core Ultra 7 265K), and 24 MB cache for the 6+8 core configurations.

Intel Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPU Lineup (Preliminary):

CPU NameArchitecture (P/E)Cores/ThreadsBase Clock (P/E Core)Max Boost (P/E Core)All Core Boost (P/E Core)Cache (L3)TDP (PL1)
Core Ultra 9 285KLion Cove / Skymont24/24 (8+16)3.7 / 3.2 GHz5.7 / 4.6 GHz5.4 / 4.6 GHz36 MB125W
Core Ultra 9 285Lion Cove / Skymont24/24 (8+16)2.5 / 1.9 GHz5.6 / 4.6 GHz4.6 / 4.6 GHz36 MB65W
Core Ultra 9 285TLion Cove / Skymont24/24 (8+16)1.4 / 1.2 GHz5.4 / 4.6 GHz4.7 / 4.5 GHz36 MB35W
Core Ultra 7 265KLion Cove / Skymont20/20 (8+12)3.9 / 3.3 GHz5.5 / 4.6 GHz5.2 / 4.6 GHz33 MB125W
Core Ultra 7 265KFLion Cove / Skymont20/20 (8+12)3.9 / 3.3 GHz5.5 / 4.6 GHz5.2 / 4.6 GHz33 MB65W
Core Ultra 7 265Lion Cove / Skymont20/20 (8+12)2.4 / 1.8 GHz5.3 / 4.6 GHz5.1 / 4.6 GHz33 MB65W
Core Ultra 7 265FLion Cove / Skymont20/20 (8+12)2.4 / 1.8 GHz5.3 / 4.6 GHz5.1 / 4.6 GHz33 MB35W
Core Ultra 7 265TLion Cove / Skymont20/20 (8+12)1.5 / 1.2 GHz5.2 / 4.6 GHz4.6 / 4.5 GHz33 MB65W
Core Ultra 5 245KLion Cove / Skymont14/14 (6+8)4.2 / 3.6 GHz5.2 / 4.6 GHz5.0 / 4.6 GHz24 MB125W
Core Ultra 5 245KFLion Cove / Skymont14/14 (6+8)4.2 / 3.6 GHz5.2 / 4.6 GHz5.0 / 4.6 GHz24 MB65W
Core Ultra 5 245Lion Cove / Skymont14/14 (6+8)3.4 / 2.9 GHz5.1 / 4.5 GHz4.9 / 4.5 GHz24 MB65W
Core Ultra 5 235Lion Cove / Skymont14/14 (6+8)3.4 / 2.9 GHz5.0 / 4.4 GHz4.8 / 4,4 GHz24 MB65W
Core Ultra 5 225Lion Cove / Skymont10/10 (6+4)3.3 / 2.7 GHz4.9 / 4.4 GHz4.7 / 4.4 GHz21 MB65W
Core Ultra 5 225FLion Cove / Skymont10/10 (6+4)3.3 / 2.7 GHz4.9 / 4.4 GHz4.7 / 4.4 GHz21 MB65W
Core Ultra 3 205Lion Cove / Skymont8/8 (4+4)3.8 / 3.3 GHz4.9 / 4.2 GHz4.7 / 4.2 GHz15 MB65W

Lastly, there is a new detail regarding the top Intel Z890 motherboards which will be part of the 800-series platform. These motherboards are said to feature native support for Thunderbolt 4 and a range of other upgrades which are expected to include support for faster memory thanks to the updated Arrow Lake-S (Core Ultra 200) memory controller and more. Following is what we know about Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPUs so far:

  • LGA 1851 Socket Longevity Planned Uptill 2026
  • DDR5 Only Compatibility, No DDR4 Support
  • Kicks off With 800-Series Motherboards
  • Support For Up To DDR5-6400 Memory (Native JEDEC)
  • Increased PCIe Gen 5.0 Lanes Through CPU & PCH
  • Arrow Lake-S First Desktop Family Supported (DIY)
  • Arrow Lake-S CPUs feature 3 MB L2 Cache Per P-Core
  • Arrow Lake-S CPUs feature Alchemist iGPUs
  • Arrow Lake-S CPUs feature 8+16, 6+8 CPU SKUs
  • Arrow Lake-S 8+16 (24 Cores)
  • Arrow Lake-S 6+8 (14 Cores)
  • No Hyper-Threading Support(?)
  • Launching In 2H 2024

A little birdie has also told us that we are going to see Intel 800-series motherboards in action very soon, most likely at Computex 2024 so stay tuned for more information.

News Source: Anandtech Forums

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.

Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.

Button