Unfortunately no gaming tests, but we are still getting a first look at more relevant benchmarks like video encoding, CPU rendering in Blender and PC Mark. Of course, Alder Lake is dominating in the single core Geekbench 5 tests, but beyond that, performance is either on par or slightly lower compared to the competition. It all might come down to pricing, as Intel's models seem to be at least $100 cheaper than the AMD counterparts, and the i5-12600K could indeed emerge as a best buy.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Leak-reveals-first-relevant-Intel-Alder-Lake-S-benchmarks-and-alleged-launch-prices.560489.0.html
Lol, what is this horseshit? GB5 multi-core at 26000 for a 5950X? Where is that number coming from? Never seen a GB5 test even close to that for a 5950X. This is just garbage information that shouldn't be taken seriously at all. Not even sure why it is being "reported" on.
More like CB R23 score
Quote from: Zulny R on September 10, 2021, 19:35:29
More like CB R23 score
Quote from: Ish on September 10, 2021, 17:47:53
Lol, what is this horseshit? GB5 multi-core at 26000 for a 5950X? Where is that number coming from? Never seen a GB5 test even close to that for a 5950X. This is just garbage information that shouldn't be taken seriously at all. Not even sure why it is being "reported" on.
Yes, it looks like the first two charts come from Cinebench R23. The original article does not mention this so the guys from WCCFTech assumed they are from GB 5. Should have checked myself seeing that the WCCFTech article has some other mistakes I corrected.
Also, worth mentioning that these scores for Ryzen 5950X are way too low. Geekbench for Ryzen Single core can be pretty much near 1750-1800 levels with some tweaks.
I don't believe until I see some benchmarks