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Intel reveals Project Firefly to make cheap Wildcat Lake laptops that rival MacBook Neo

Project Firefly standardizes Wildcat Lake laptop designs so PC makers can chase Apple with lower prices and cleaner hardware

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Intel is trying to make budget Windows laptops look a lot less bargain-bin.

Project Firefly, launched in China alongside Intel’s Wildcat Lake laptop chips, gives PC makers a common hardware playbook for thinner, cleaner, lower-cost systems that can take a more direct swing at MacBook Neo. The promise is simple, fewer compromises where budget laptops usually show them most.

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Intel says the first wave will include more than 70 designs, with manufacturers using a tighter approach to parts, layout, and system design. Early Wildcat Lake machines cited in the source start around $449, with another example around $600.

Can Intel make budget laptops feel premium

Intel’s supply-chain plan is the heart of Project Firefly.

According to a report from VideoCardz, Intel wants to use China’s phone supply chain to help make Wildcat Lake laptops cheaper to build at scale. The Firefly plan also points to upstream and downstream partners working on system-level design, component selection, and cost structure.

A 50-pin connector sits at the center of the hardware cleanup. Intel is pushing PC makers toward shared components, modular motherboard and I/O layouts, and easier parts reuse. The result could be value laptops that look more consistent across brands and are easier to service.

Why should Apple worry about consistency

Project Firefly attacks one of Apple’s strongest advantages, control over the whole machine.

Intel’s plan includes a unified design strategy, plus a motherboard design that is 5% smaller and uses 7% fewer devices than past offerings. Those small changes point to a bigger goal, fewer parts, tighter builds, and more predictable designs across lower-cost laptops.

There’s a technical ceiling, though. Wildcat Lake’s NPU tops out at 17 TOPS, below the 40 NPU TOPS Microsoft requires for Copilot+ PC certification. Intel’s cheaper laptops may look more ambitious than they are on AI, even if the value story gets stronger.

What should buyers watch next

Project Firefly now has to survive the jump from reference design to retail shelf.

Intel is positioning Wildcat Lake for value laptops, with designs scheduled through 2026 and claimed battery life up to 18.5 hours for video playback. That scale sounds promising, but final products will still depend on each manufacturer’s screen, battery, memory, storage, and cooling choices.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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