Skip to main content

Intel CEO says that Lunar Lake was ‘a one-off’

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger presents Intel's roadmap including Arrow Lake, Lunar Lake, and Panther Lake.
Intel

Intel’s CEO Pat Gelsinger talked about the future of its top processors in the company’s latest earnings call. Apart from reporting a huge $16.6 billion loss, the earnings call revealed a bit about next-gen products like Panther Lake and Nova Lake. According to Gelsinger, those two generations of laptop CPUs will not follow in Lunar Lake’s footsteps. In fact, Gelsinger referred to Lunar Lake as “a one-off.”

Lunar Lake introduced a first for Intel — at least in terms of consumer processors. It came with on-package LPDDR5X memory, which brought Intel closer to some of the highly successful M chips manufactured by Apple. On-package memory can improve data transfer speeds and boost efficiency, and Lunar Lake was also proven to have solid battery life. Despite these benefits, Intel isn’t going to give Lunar Lake a direct successor.

Recommended Videos

In the earnings call (as shared by VideoCardz), Gelsinger explained that Lunar Lake was always meant to be a niche product, but circumstances changed, making it a high-volume one.

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger holding a Panther Lake chip.
TweakTown

“Lunar Lake was initially designed to be a niche product that we wanted to achieve the highest performance and great battery life and capability, and then AI PC occurred. And with AI PC, it went from being a niche product to a pretty high-volume product. Now, relatively speaking, we’re not talking about 50 million, 100 million units, but a meaningful portion of our total mix from a relatively small piece of it as well,” said Pat Gelsinger.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

However, Gelsinger went on to say that the complex integration of on-package memory affects Intel’s profit margin too much, and it appears that the company isn’t going to repeat this design in Panther Lake and Nova Lake CPUs. Although both are considered direct successors to Lunar Lake, they won’t feature on-package memory.

Gelsinger elaborated on Intel’s plans, saying: “So it really is, for us, a one-off with Lunar Lake. That will not be the case with Panther Lake, Nova Lake, and its successors as well. We’ll build it in a more traditional way with the memory off package in the CPU, GPU, NPU, and I/O [input/output] capabilities in the package. But volume memory will be off-package in the road map going forward.”

Gelsinger also confirmed that Panther Lake is currently slated for release in the second half of 2025. The CPUs will be the first client CPU generation based on Intel’s 18A node, which Gelsinger says is both more performant and cheaper to manufacture.

There was no mention of Intel’s next-gen Battlemage GPUs during the earnings call, but Gelsinger spoke about simplifying the road map and said there’s now “less need for discrete graphics in the market going forward.” That doesn’t bode well for Intel’s discrete graphics department, but we might not find out more until CES 2025.

Monica J. White
Monica is a computing writer at Digital Trends, focusing on PC hardware. Since joining the team in 2021, Monica has written…
Intel’s next laptop chips may have a secret weapon
Intel Core Ultra Series 2 Lunar Lake chipset.

An upcoming Intel graphics solution, namely the Intel Arc 140T, has recently been spotted on GFXBench. The most interesting bit is that it offers a noticeable performance advantage over the Xe2-based Arc 140V iGPU that recently made its appearance on Intel’s latest Lunar Lake mobile CPUs.

A post by X (formerly Twitter) user Michael (@miktdt) compares GFXbench scores of the Arc 140T with two Arc 140V SKUs—one with 16GB memory and the other with 8GB. The 8GB Arc 140V reached 6,613 frames with an average of 106.7 framers per second (fps), while the 16GB version achieved 6,839 frames at 110.3 fps. However, the Intel Arc 140T, equipped with 16GB of memory, excelled with 11,056 frames at an average of 178.3 fps, surpassing the 16GB Arc 140V by 62%, despite both GPUs sharing eight Xe cores.

Read more
Intel Arc Battlemage finally shows signs of life
The Intel logo on the Arc A770 graphics card.

In the last few weeks, we've been bombarded with reports regarding Nvidia's upcoming top graphics cards, but leakers have all been silent about Intel Arc Battlemage. Today, however, we saw signs of life straight from the source as Intel has included Battlemage graphics cards in its new media drivers.

As spotted by VideoCardz, Intel added BMG -- the shortcut for Battlemage -- to its latest round of drivers on GitHub. This covers an addition to the open-source media driver for the video acceleration API (VAAPI), which includes various codecs for video decoding and encoding. The column labeled as BMG looks pretty bare, though, with zero encoding support so far.

Read more
Qualcomm counters Intel about its performance claims
Qualcomm's CEO presenting Snapdragon X Elite CPUs at Computex 2024.

In the year since Qualcomm first debuted its Snapdragon X Elite, the competition hasn't been silent. Intel released both Meteor Lake and Lunar Lake chips, the latter of which felt like a legitimate response to Qualcomm's advances in battery life and efficiency.

But Qualcomm isn't impressed by Intel's latest offerings.

Read more