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Intel reveals Panther Lake CPUs, and it could be the dawn of a new era 

Intel's 18A silicon will land as Core Ultra series 3  processors later this year.

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Intel Panther Lake chip in hand.
Intel

Intel has finally announced its Panther Lake CPU architecture, marking the launch of a silicon series built atop the new 18A (technically, 2-nanometer) process. Set to hit the shelves under the Intel Core Ultra series 3 branding, the new processors will start appearing in computing gear later this year. A lot hinges on the success of this new silicon line-up, and it seems Intel is making the right moves. 

What does Panther Lake bring to the table? 

The new Panther Lake architecture enables a scalable, multi-chiplet architecture that will offer PC makers more flexibility in picking the right chip, without having to worry about package design. So far, Intel has revealed three distinct flavors of its next-gen chips, each with a dedicated NPU and support for PCIe Gen 5 lanes, Wi-Fi 7, and Thunderbolt 5 compatibility. 

At the baseline is an 8-core chip that will likely appear in low-end machines. Then there are two 16-core variants, one with four Xe graphics cores and ray tracing units each, while the higher-end trim packs 12 Xe cores and an equal number of ray-tracing accelerators. 

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Intel says the new Cougar Cove and Darkmont cores deliver a 50% jump in CPU performance, while the updated Arc GPU architecture also raises the graphics output by the same margin. The company says Panther Lake borrows heavily from the efficiency of Lunar Lake silicon and the high-performance output of Arrow Lake processors, delivering up to 40% higher power efficiency. 

Why does it matter? 

The performance gains touted by Intel are impressive, and in the age of on-device AI, Panther Lake chips also hit the 50 TOPS NPU performance to win the Copilot+ PC badge. So far, Qualcomm has commanded an early edge in the on-device AI game, equipping even the entry-level Snapdragon X processor with enough firepower to land the Copilot+ label for exclusive AI-powered Windows experiences such as Recall. 

Over on the gaming front, the Xe 3 graphics architecture lands support for the company’s XeSS 3 AI super-scaling and frame generation technology, a rival to Nvidia’s DLSS tech. So far, it looks like Intel has made solid improvements, at least for the laptop market, but I’ll wait for Intel to drop more granular performance figures to see how the Panther Lake chips stack up against the latest from Qualcomm, AMD, and Apple’s upcoming M5 series processors.  

Qualcomm, despite operating on the Arm side of the Windows ecosystem, has climbed much higher on the charts with the Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme, which even managed to beat Apple’s mighty M4 Pro in early CPU and GPU benchmarks. So far, Panther Lake has shown solid gains across the CPU, GPU, and NPU clusters. Let’s wait and see how those claims translate on the desktop platform, and whether Qualcomm and Apple will be the new chart toppers for the coming year.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
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