Skip to main content

Leaked Alder Lake benchmark shows 21% performance gain over AMD

The leaked Alder Lake benchmark train isn’t stopping. As we near the end of 2021, which is when Intel has said Alder Lake will launch, leaked benchmarks continue to offer a look into the performance of the upcoming range. Most recently, we got an idea of how the processors will stack up in benchmarking staple Cinebench — and the results suggest Alder Lake could be faster than all available desktop CPUs.

Like a lot of benchmark leaks, this one comes free of context. Known Twitter leaker @9550pro shared two screenshots of results in Cinebench. The interesting result comes from Cinebench R23, which is the most recent version. The screenshot isn’t too forthcoming, blocking out the multi-core score and multiplier ratio entirely.

Cinebench results for Alder Lake processor.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It also blocks what looks like a fourth digit on the single-core result. It looks like the single core score is 2,05x, with the last digit blocked. If that’s true, Alder Lake’s single-core performance could surpass every consumer desktop processor currently available. According to data from ComputerBase, the top-performing Core i9-11900K only reached a single-core score of 1,697.

Recommended Videos

Earlier this week, other leaked Cinebench R23 results showed the Core i9-12900K matching AMD’s Ryzen 9 5950X. According to the leak, Alder Lake could best AMD’s top chip by as much as 21% in single-core benchmarks, though it’s important to take the leaked number with skepticism.

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

Alder Lake is rumored to feature up to a 20% increase in single-core performance. Using the data from the leak and ComputerBase, the Cinebench result represents a 20.8% increase at its lowest. This type of result isn’t out of the realm of possibility, but there are a couple of critical factors missing from the screenshot.

First, we don’t know what the actual result is. Although it looks like the fourth number is blocked out, we have no way to confirm that there’s a fourth number at all (outside of comparing it to a normal Cinebench R23 result). More importantly, the screenshot doesn’t show the multiplier ratio.

Basically, we don’t know if the test was run with an overclocked processor. Since overclocking boosts the speed of each core, it can have a big impact on single-core benchmarks. The leaked result is possible given what we know about Alder Lake, but it might not be what you see with a stock part.

Regardless, it’s important not to take prerelease benchmarks too seriously. At this point, performance data is at its most unreliable point. Intel will likely provide benchmarks when it lifts the curtain on Alder Lake, but we recommend waiting for third-party testing before drawing any conclusions about performance.

Leaked benchmarks suggest Intel might be taking the fight back to AMD. Alder Lake represents a shift in Team Blue’s design, moving to a hybrid architecture similar to ARM while shrinking the manufacturing process down to Intel 7, formerly known as 10nm Enhanced.

We don’t have word on when Intel will launch Alder Lake yet. Rumors suggest the flagship chip, the Core i9-12900K, will feature 16 cores and 24 threads, split across eight performance cores and eight efficient cores.

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’s new CPUs decisively end the high-performance battle with Intel
A person holding the AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X.

AMD is putting its foot down. In what Donny Woligroski, senior processor technical marketing manager at AMD, called the "worst-kept secret" in the world of desktop processors, Team Red announced it's bringing its wildly popular Threadripper chips back to high-end desktops. They're destined to be some of the best processors money can buy, and Intel currently has no way to compete.

If you're not up to speed, AMD quietly and unceremoniously ended its Threadripper series for desktops a little over a year ago. When the company announced its previous generation of Threadripper CPUs, it revealed it would stick with the Enterprise-grade Pro series chips going forward. A little over 12 months after that announcement, AMD is reversing course.

Read more
Intel’s Raptor Lake refresh prices have leaked, and hikes are on the way
An Intel processor over a dark blue background.

We're most likely just a couple of weeks away from the release date for the Intel Raptor Lake refresh, and while Intel itself hasn't said much about it, interesting tidbits of information leak out pretty frequently. Today, we got a good look at what might be the pricing of almost the entire lineup. And it looks like price increases are coming, however minor they may be.

We expected that a price hike was likely for the Raptor Lake refresh, and that's exactly what seems to be happening. As per a tip sent to VideoCardz, the majority of the 14th-Gen lineup appeared briefly at a Canadian retailer known as Canada Computers. While the CPUs weren't listed, they could be found by searching for the product names, and that gives an idea of what to expect. Keep in mind that these prices are in Canadian dollars.

Read more
The leaks were wrong — Intel Meteor Lake is coming to desktop
Intel CEO talking about Meteor Lake

For months, industry leaks have seemed to confirm that Intel’s Meteor Lake processors won’t be coming to desktop computers. Now, though, Intel has turned that narrative on its head, with the latest info confirming they’ll be launched on PCs after all.

The new information comes from a PCWorld interview with Michelle Johnston Holthaus, Intel’s executive vice president and general manager of the Client Computing Group. PCWorld spoke to Johnston Holthaus at the Intel Innovation 2023 event and managed to wring some previously unknown tidbits out of the VP.

Read more