Go deeper with TH Premium: CPU
Bartlett Lake is one among Intel’s most unusual CPU lineups thus far, that includes a P-core-only design based mostly on Raptor Cove. But what caught everybody’s consideration was the flagship’s 12 P-core configuration, that includes 4 extra P-cores than any hybrid Intel CPU Intel has made to this point. Discovered by PCGamesHardware, a German YouTuber put the flagship Core 9 273PQE Bartlett Lake chip to the take a look at in a four-hour livestream and located it outperforms the Core i9-14900K in a number of video games by as much as 9%.
| Row 0 – Cell 0 |
Core 9 273PQE | Core i9-14900K | Performance improve |
| Horizon Zero Dawn | 310 FPS | 294 FPS | +5.4% |
| Monster Hunter Wilds | 126 FPS | 118 FPS | +6.7% |
| Rainbow Six Siege | 454 FPS | 456 FPS | -0.4% |
| Outcast | 60 FPS | 55 FPS | +9.1% |
| Shadow of the Tomb Raider | 273 FPS | 250 FPS | +9.2% |
| Counter-Strike 2 | 325 FPS | 330 FPS | -1.5% |
The YouTuber’s outcomes reveal that Intel’s newest embedded flagship might probably be Intel’s quickest gaming CPU thus far. Technically, Intel has a good faster Core i9-14900KS, however based mostly on our Core i9-14900KS review, the halo part is not 10% faster than the 14900K. We would need to test the Core 9 273PQE ourselves to verify if Bartlett Lake truly has Intel’s best CPU for gaming, but the YouTuber’s benchmarks provide enough evidence to suggest it is possible.
Article continues below
Intel’s tile-based approach for the Arrow Lake architecture in the Core Ultra 200S series failed to improve gaming performance over its Raptor Lake predecessors in gaming. Intel was able to partially rectify this issue with the Core Ultra 200 Plus series by overclocking the chip’s internal fabric, but even the new Core Ultra 7 270K Plus is slightly behind the 14900K in our gaming CPU benchmark hierarchy.
Bartlett Lake, the codename for the Core 9 273PQE, is based on Intel’s older Raptor Cove microarchitecture, which is also found in Intel’s 13th and 14th-gen Raptor Lake CPUs. The chip comes with 12 P-cores, 24 threads, a 5.9GHz peak boost clock, and 36MB each of L2 and L3 cache. Bartlett Lake is an embedded solution aimed at mission-critical deployments, so sadly, it is not officially compatible with desktop LGA 1700 socket motherboards. That said, modders have gotten the 273PQE to work in a consumer LGA 1700 motherboard through BIOS mods.
Follow Tom’s Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our newest information, evaluation, & evaluations in your feeds.