Intel Arrow Lake-S “Core Ultra 200” Desktop CPU Lineup Reportedly Include Core Ultra 9 285K, Core Ultra 7 265K, Core Ultra 5 245K

Intel Arrow Lake-S “Core Ultra 200” Desktop CPU Lineup Reportedly Include Core Ultra 9 285K, Core Ultra 7 265K, Core Ultra 5 245K

Sep 20, 2024 - 21:09
Updated: 22 days ago
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Intel Arrow Lake-S “Core Ultra 200” Desktop CPU Lineup Reportedly Include Core Ultra 9 285K, Core Ultra 7 265K, Core…
Intel Core Ultra 200 "Arrow Lake" Desktop CPU Specs Leak: Core Ultra 9 285K & Ultra 7 265K With 250W MTP, Ultra 5 245K at 159W 1

Intel's Core Ultra 200 "Arrow Lake-S" Desktop CPU lineup should reportedly include a total of six SKUs with up to 24 cores based on next-gen P-Core & E-Core architectures.

The rumor comes from @OneRaichu who has posted the possible SKUs within the Intel Core Ultra 200 K & Non-K CPU lineup. It looks like Intel would initially offer a total of six SKUs and follow up in the coming months with more configurations. The naming convention doesn't reveal much about the actual core configs but they are listed below:

  • Core Ultra 9 285K (Intel Core i9-14900K Successor)
  • Core Ultra 7 265K (Intel Core i7-14700K Successor)
  • Core Ultra 5 245K (Intel Core i5-14600K Successor)
  • In addition to these, there are also three Non-K Intel Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPUs mentioned which include the following:

  • Core Ultra 9 275
  • Core Ultra 7 255
  • Core Ultra 5 240
  • If true, it looks like the Intel Core Ultra 200 "Arrow Lake-S" Desktop CPU family will have a very different naming convention and segmentation. The Intel Core Ultra 9 285K should be the flagship with up to 24 cores and 24 threads, the Core Ultra 7 265K should be the second-best chip with a possible core count of 20 while the Core Ultra 5 245K could end up featuring 14 cores. This is if Intel goes with an 8+16 die configuration for its top Core Ultra 9 & Core Ultra 7 SKUs and uses the 6+8 die for its Core Ultra 5 SKUs. It is also possible that all three "K" SKUs feature the 8+16 die while the Non-K SKUs can end up using the 6+8 die.

    This is just speculation at this point but these naming schemes are interesting nonetheless. The Intel Core Ultra 240F has already been reported to utilize both 8+16 and 6+8 dies in H0 & C0 configurations. With that said, we know that Intel's Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPUs will utilize the new Lion Cove P-Core architecture and the Skymont E-Core architecture.

    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
  • Intel's Arrow Lake-S "Core Ultra 200" Desktop CPUs will be launching later this year with a formal announcement expected at Computex 2024 in early June. The CPUs will be hitting the LGA 1851 socket & will be incorporating several next-gen technologies so expect lots of desktop action in the second half of this year from AMD & Intel.

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    Christopher Holloway

    Christopher Holloway is the founder and director of Progressive Robot, a UK-based technology company. A full-stack engineer with more than two decades of experience, he works across PHP development, ecommerce, Linux infrastructure, technical SEO and AI automation, and writes here on technology, AI, hardware and software.

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