News Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 shines in Geekbench 6 benchmark — Strix Point has higher single-core performance than Core i9-14900HX but falls behind in muti-core

"We don't have official Lunar Lake Geekbench 6 benchmarks yet, but based on some leaked results, the flagship 288V appears to do single-core results in the 2,900 range, which would outperform the HX 375 by a couple of percent."

Forbes just pegged an Intel Core Ultra 7 258V at 2773 in Geekbeek 6 single-core on a Dell XPS 13. The 2900 range might be obtainable on the Core Ultra 9 288V?
 
Here the Geekbench 6 score to compare with this CPU Stock config After the intel revision the cpu never goes up than 84w single core max 23w

Intel I5 - 14600T (STOCK 35w) (DDR4)

2854
Single-Core Score

13876
Multi-Core Score
 
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AMD's Strix Point are quite outperforming Intel's latest and greatest Lunar Lake. The latter might have the edge in terms of power-efficiency (which in part is certaily explained by TSMC's best 3nm process node to date) but AMD's mobile processors have undeniably much improved on their power effieciency as well.
So, notebooks specifically optimzed for long battery life (e.g. using power-saving LCD panels etc) and which do not have extremely high memory or computational demands, will most likely be best equipped with Lunar Lake.
However, people who are working on a daily with virtual machines, do have to compile code or need "workstation-like" performance in ther notebook for content creation, will most probably be better served by AMD's Strix Point chips.
 
Great review, thanks! Lately it's interesting to compare Intel and AMD processors, especially top models. Here you can even see a comparison of these cpus with detailed Geekbench 6 specifications, such as: File Compression, HTML5 Browser, Text Processing etc..
SO, you are comparing a mobile AMD CPU with a top of the ine desktop CPU from INtel?
 
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