The new AMD Ryzen 7 6800HS laptop processor has just appeared on PassMark where it produced a sterling result that left it over 23% ahead of its predecessor, the Ryzen 7 5800HS. In terms of the competition, the Ryzen 7 6800HS performed at a level that landed in-between the Intel Core i5-12500H and i7-12700H but with greater efficiency.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-Ryzen-7-6800HS-offers-23-benchmark-gains-over-Ryzen-7-5800HS-while-slotting-neatly-between-the-i5-12500H-and-i7-12700H.617471.0.html
"The hybrid Intel chips have slightly higher base TDPs (45 W) but much higher TDP up figures of 115 W." The max TDP for Ryzen 7 6800HS is very far from 35W...around +80W. you have to compare apples with apples...
Ryzen HS-series competes with Intel P-series,
Ryzen H-series competes with Intel H-series
We know this because certain models of laptops offer these specific pairs of chips. In this sense the "fairest" and most relevant method for potential buyers would be to measure
1) plugged-in performance
2) unplugged sustained performance
3) unplugged power consumption
of '6800HS vs 1260P' and '6980HX vs 12900H',
using same RAM and SSD modules, and similar chassis form-factor. Also you cannot leave out model of laptops used and custom power limits set by the tester when discussing these chips' capacity.
this is nice, but given that zen 4 phoenix made on 5nm + rdna 2 or rdna 3 igpu comes in January next year, i don't see why you'd buy this. my 4800H scores about 18000-20000 points in the same benchmark, so it isn't that far off and it is a 2019 cpu.