In recent years, Intel’s single-core performance has been very strong. Zen3’s Ryzen 5000 series has just caught up with the 11th-generation Core, the new architecture’s 12th and 13th-generation Cores have been running all the way, and Zen4’s Ryzen 7000 series has no hope of catching up.
In addition to adding 8 small cores to 24 cores, the latest flagship i9-13900K also has a maximum acceleration frequency of 5.8GHz, which is 300MHz higher than the ash version of the i9-12900KS.
PassMark has included four test scores of the i9-13900K, with an average single-core running score of 4833, 9.5% ahead of the i9-12900KS, setting a new record once more.
The i7-13700 (without K) is also very fierce, with a single core running out of 4347 points, second only to the i9-12900KS, which has surpassed the i9-12900K/KF, and the i7-13700K is bound to be even more fierce.
In addition, the i5-13500 also exceeded 4000 points, which is basically the same grade as the i7-12700K/KF.
The frequency of the Ryzen 7000 series is not low. The Ryzen 9 7950X can accelerate to 5.7GHz by default, and it can reach 5.85GHz under extreme conditions, but from the current situation, the single-core performance is still inferior to the 13th generation Core.
In terms of multi-core performance, the i9-13900K scored 54433 points, which is regarding 18.7% higher than the 16-core Ryzen 9 5950Xit depends on whether the Ryzen 9 7950X can recover the situation.
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