• Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Email Get Tom’s Hardware’s best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox. • You are now subscribed Your newsletter sign-up was successful Jaykihn, a blogger who tends to have accurate information about Intel’s plans, this week revealed details about the company’s codenamedBartlett Lake CPUs,which feature only P-cores and come in an LGA1700 form factor. • As it turns out, these CPUs feature up to 12 cores with a single-thread boost of 5.90 GHz, which makes them quite appealing for gamers on the morally outdated LGA1700 platform, which can currently support up to eight P-cores. • CPU scaling with DLSS Ryzen to the top: How AMD innovated in the gaming CPU market How ARM is working its way into PCs AMD CES 2026 gaming trends press Q&A roundtable transcript Intel’s Core 200E-series ‘Bartlett Lake’ processor family will include 11 models that will come in three tiers: 125W, 65W, and 45W. • Each tier will include SKUs with 12, 10, and 8 cores, 36MB, 33MB, and 24MB L3 cache, and an integrated GPU with 32 or 24 execution units. • The main difference between CPUs from different power tiers will be their operating frequencies, including base clocks, single-thread boost clocks, and multi-thread boost clocks.

Article Summaries:

  • Intel has announced its Core 200E‑series “Bartlett Lake” CPUs, a line of LGA1700 processors that rely solely on high‑performance P‑cores. The flagship model, the Core 273PQE, is reported to feature 12 Raptor Cove cores with a single‑thread boost of up to 5.9 GHz, 36 MB of L3 cache and an integrated GPU. The family will span 11 SKUs across 125 W, 65 W and 45 W power tiers, offering 12, 10 or 8 cores. While the chips are aimed at edge, industrial and embedded markets, it remains unclear whether consumer motherboards will support them or if they will ever reach the retail market.

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