Skip to main content

Intel 13th-gen Raptor Lake arrives just in time to hit back at AMD

Intel today revealed its 13th-gen Raptor Lake processors during its Innovation 2022 event, heating up the already hot battle between AMD and Intel. Although these new chips share a lot with the previous generation under the hood, Intel is promising more cores, higher clock speeds, and performance that will catapult 13th-gen chips to the top of the best CPU rankings.

Before digging in, here’s a quick look at specs for the three Raptor Lake processors coming. Some specs are official, while others have been compiled from specs posted by Intel a couple of weeks back (though not confirmed).

Recommended Videos
Core i9-13900K Core i7-13700K Core i5-13600K
Cores/Threads 24 (8+16)/32 16(8+8)/24 14(6+8)/20
Base clock speed 3GHz (P-core), 2.2GHz (E-core) 3.4GHz (P-core), 2.5GHz (E-core) 3.5GHz (P-core), 2.6GHZ (E-core)
Boost clock speed Up to 5.8GHz Up to 5.4GHz Up to 5.1GHz
L2 cache 32MB 24MB 20MB
L3 cache 36MB 30MB 24MB
Max boost power 253W 253W 181W
Price $589 $409 $319
Please enable Javascript to view this content

Perhaps the biggest change this generation is double the E-cores on each of Intel’s newly announced processors. Like the previous generation, Raptor Lake uses a hybrid architecture that mixes performance (P) cores and efficient (E) cores. Although the new chips don’t come with more P-cores, the extra E-cores boost the overall count.

The flagship Core i9-13900K pushes counts up to 24 cores from 16 on the Core i9-12900K, the Core i7-13700K jumps from 12 cores to 16, and the Core i5-13600K goes from 10 cores up to 14 cores. Although overall core counts are up, it’s important to keep in mind that E-cores don’t support hyperthreading. AMD’s Ryzen 9 7950X, for example, only has 16 cores, but it has the same 32 threads that are available to the Core i9-13900K.

Intel Raptor Lake design slide.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Cores aren’t the only trick Intel has up its sleeve, though. Clock speeds are also up across the board, including a massive 600MHz boost to the Core i9-13900K. Although it’s still below the 6GHz mark, Intel says the new chips come with similar overclocking headroom as the previous generation, and it even showcased the P-cores passing 8GHz with an LN2 extreme overclocking demo.

For overall performance, Intel says Raptor Lake chips provide 15% better single-thread performance and 41% better multi-threaded performance. The company also claims a 24% boost in gaming, as well as a 34% jump in content-creation workloads.

Raptor Lake gaming performance graph.
Intel

Compared to AMD’s Ryzen 9 5950X, Intel says the Core i9-13900K provides up to a 58% boost in gaming performance in Marvel’s Spider-Man. Other titles don’t see as much of a boost, but the results are still promising. Intel touted a 31% boost in Far Cry 6, for example, and a 19% jump in Total War Warhammer 3. 

Content-creation workloads see a larger jump, with a 69% boost in Auto Desk Revit over the Ryzen 9 5950X, as well as a 34% increase in PugetBench for After Effects. Gen-on-gen, Intel says the Core i9-13900K is 27% faster at rendering in Adobe Media Encoder and Photoshop over the Core i9-12900K, and 34% faster in Blender and Unreal Engine.

Raptor Lake content creation performance.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Although the gains are impressive, we’ll have to see how Intel’s latest chips hold up to AMD’s newly released Ryzen 9 7950X. Going into the next generation, it’s a battle between Intel Raptor Lake and AMD’s Ryzen 7000. Intel certainly has the specs to compete, with boosted core counts and clock speeds, as well as additional cache to keep up with chips like the Ryzen 7 5800X3D.

A point in Intel’s favor is that pricing remains the same as the previous generation, with the flagship coming in at $590. That’s $110 less than AMD’s current flagship, but we’ll have to wait a few weeks after the launch dust settles to see where prices end up. Intel’s Raptor Lake processors, along with Z790 motherboards, will hit store shelves on October 20.

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…
AMD didn’t even need its best CPU to beat Intel
A render of a Ryzen 9000 CPU.

Looks like the competition between AMD and Intel is about to start heating up again. AMD's upcoming second-best processor, the Ryzen 9 9900X, was just spotted in an early benchmark -- and the results are shockingly good. If this is what AMD can do with a 12-core CPU, what's going to happen when the 16-core version of Zen 5 appears in tests?

The happy news (for AMD fans, at least) comes directly from the Geekbench 6.2 database, and it all comes down to a benchmark of what appears to be a retail sample of the Ryzen 9 9900X. The chip scored an impressive 3,401 points in the single-core score, and 19,756 points in the multi-core score. That puts it far above its predecessor, the Ryzen 9 7900X, but that's not its only success.

Read more
Intel just discontinued a CPU that’s only 2 years old
Core i9-12900KS processor socketed in a motherboard.

Intel is moving on. The company recently posted two Product Change Notifications (PCN) that announced the discontinuation of multiple processors, including the Core i9-12900KS that was released just over two years ago.

In addition to the special-edition version of the Core i9-12900K, Intel announced that it's discontinuing the remaining CPUs in its 10th-gen lineup. The main stack of Intel's 10th-gen lineup, including processors like the Core i9-10900K, has already been discontinued. The newest PCN includes less prominent models, such as Intel's Pentium and Celeron lineups. It also includes the Core i5-10400F, which has remained one of the more popular budget options among Intel's CPU options.

Read more
Four months later, Intel CPU stability issues remain
Intel's 14900K CPU socketed in a motherboard.

It's been over four months since the first reports of instability in Intel's top CPUs started cropping up, and we are yet to see a fix. Although Intel has been working with its partners on delivering updates that would address the problem, the company itself had to admit in a recent community post that it still hasn't found the root cause.

Meanwhile, hardware testers are finding that even using Intel's recommended workarounds still ends up in crashes and unstable performance -- and the only solutions that seem to work are things that you'll have to settle for.

Read more