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Intel to Launch 22 Mobile Processor Models at CES 2025, not all are Arrow Lake

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Intel is significantly expanding its desktop Core Ultra 200 "Arrow Lake-S" lineup with new 65 W models along the sidelines of the 2025 International CES, but more importantly, it is bringing the "Arrow Lake" microarchitecture to the mobile space. The company is planning to launch at least 22 processor models this January, but not all of them are based on "Arrow Lake." Tom's Hardware reports that the lineup broadly revolves around the "Core 2-series" processor model numbering.

The Core Ultra 200H series consists of H-segment (conventional thickness notebook) processors in the 28 W to 45 W class, and are based on the "Arrow Lake-H" silicon. The Core Ultra 200HX series targets premium gaming notebooks and portable workstations, and consists of 55 W to 65 W class processors, including CPU overclocking capabilities on certain models. Things get interesting with the Core Ultra 200U series. These chips are based on the "Meteor Lake Refresh" silicon—an older microarchitecture—targeting the 7 W to 28 W segments for ultraportables. Lastly, there's the Core H 200 and Core U 200 series (no "Ultra" in the branding), which are based on the older "Raptor Lake" monolithic silicon, targeting mainstream notebooks.



The Core Ultra 200H series is based on a tweaked version of the "Arrow Lake" chiplet CPU, which has a smaller Compute tile with a 6P+8E CPU core configuration, and 24 MB L3 cache; but paired with a larger Graphics tile, with twice the number of Xe cores as the one on "Arrow Lake-S." The SoC tile is unchanged, and so you still only get a 14 TOPS-class NPU, which doesn't meet Microsoft Copilot+. The lineup consists of the Core Ultra 9 285H, Core Ultra 7 265H, Core Ultra 7 255H, Core Ultra 5 235H, and Core Ultra 5 225H.

The Core Ultra 200HX series, is based on "Arrow Lake HX," which is basically a BGA variant of the "Arrow Lake-S," with a large Compute tile that has 8P+16E CPU cores, 36 MB of L3 cache, more I/O from the SoC tile thanks to a larger version of the breakout I/O tile, but a smaller Graphics tile with just 4 Xe cores. The idea here is that a gaming notebook or portable workstation is bound to come with a discrete GPU. The lineup consists of the Core Ultra 9 285HX, Core Ultra 9 275HX, Core Ultra 7 265HX, Core Ultra 7 255HX, Core Ultra 5 245HX, and the Core Ultra 5 235HX.

Why Intel decided to leave the U-segment to the older "Meteor Lake Refresh" microarchitecture probably has to do with the Core Ultra 200V series "Lunar Lake" the company launched in 2024. "Lunar Lake" is cutting-edge, featuring the latest CPU core IP, as well as a Copilot+ NPU, and Xe2 "Battlemage" graphics, which means the company wants premium ultraportables to stick to "Lunar Lake." Notebook OEMs probably want a more cost-effective U-segment processor line, and so having this based on "Arrow Lake" would cannibalize "Lunar Lake." The company would rather refresh "Meteor Lake." The lineup is spartan, consisting of the Core Ultra 7 265U, Core Ultra 7 255U, Core Ultra 5 235U, and Core Ultra 5 225U.

Lastly, there's the Core non-Ultra U/H series. These chips lack an NPU, and feature older CPU and graphics IP, as they're based on the "Raptor Lake" monolithic silicon. Intel probably wants the mainstream notebook market to soak up all remaining inventories of "Raptor Lake," and hence created a line of mobile processors that's vastly differentiated, with 7 processor SKUs—Core 9 270H, Core 7 250H, Core 7 240H, Core 5 220H, Core 5 210H, Core 7 250U, and Core 5 220U.



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Raptor Lake? On the latest generation numbering?

*Laughs in AMD's numbering scheme is misleading*
 
I wanted to buy a notebook. Those processor numbers are a mess for any company.
I hardly could figure out the future performance.
Notebooks are really a mess these days when I want to figure out the future specs.
 
22 is too many that’s crazy.
 
22 is too many that’s crazy.
It's ok, cause their AI bots created this whole situation on purpose, so just ignore all the psycho-babble PR's until the chips are actually available to review & test, then decide on which one to buy, if you can :D
 
Whenever I see "Core 2-series" I think of the Core 2 Quad that was in my first desktop.
 
It's ok, cause their AI bots created this whole situation on purpose, so just ignore all the psycho-babble PR's until the chips are actually available to review & test, then decide on which one to buy, if you can :D
I would buy the ones without the evil AI bots inside.
 
Raptor Lake? On the latest generation numbering?

*Laughs in AMD's numbering scheme is misleading*
I've never understood, they claimed the old names were confusing.

Core i3/5/7 was too complicated, so lets throw ultra and H and V and other garbage in there. Make it way harder!

It's just silly.
 
I would buy the ones without the evil AI bots inside.
Shhhh, talk like that will get you cancelled, without prejudice or possibility of redemption....ever.....

so it's AI or notta, hahahahahahaha :D
 
22 is too many that’s crazy.

They do this just about every year. 2023's Raptor Lake-U/P/H/HX dump was 39 unique SKUs on the same day. 2022's dump was 27 SKUs. 2021 and 2024 have been lighter years recently with only about 8-10 new mobile SKUs every few months.

When you combine that with desktop (and sometimes server) SKUs Intel usually launches between 70 and 100 new products at each CES. At CES 2023 it was 129 models with Xeon coming in right at the end of the week.
 
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22 mobile processors and we'll be lucky if even a quarter of them are worth buying :D

Intel is going through quite the predicament :ohwell:
 
Maybe OEMs will get those Core 5 220Us for free.
 
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