PassMark software has highlighted a new entry in its CPU Mark single-threaded performance rankings. In a Tweet shared this weekend it embedded a chart showing Intel’s upcomingCore Ultra 9 285Kprocessor (an Arrow Lake-S desktop part) is the new single-core leader in the eponymous benchmark. The firm admits that the tested sample “might be a pre-release engineering sample, but results are looking good.”

PassMark’s assessment seems reasonable, as the Core Ultra 9 285K confidently noses ahead of some ofthe best CPUsavailable to consumers, like theIntel Core i9-14900KS, and a host of Apple M3 variants. It is even further ahead of chips like the Core i9-13900K and AMD’s best-placedRyzen 9 9950X. Expand the embedded Tweet to see the full chart.

Intel Arrow Lake CPU

New single thread CPU performance leader. #Intel Core Ultra 9 285K(note that this might be an pre-release engineering sample, but results are looking good) pic.twitter.com/yqLECdl9XEOctober 5, 2024

The above is great news in the single-core stakes for Intel ‘team blue’ fans, but multi-core results found onPassMark’s websitearen’t as stellar. The upcoming Arrow Lake-S CPU has a score of 46,872 in PassMark’s multi-threaded tests. That’s a score that nestles snugly between the Core i9-13900 and the i7-13700K CPUs. For further context, the aforementioned 14900KS scores 62,502 in this benchmark. The new top-end desktop chip looks rather anemic if it intends to step into the Raptor Lake Refresh part’s shoes.

Mark Tyson

pic.twitter.com/L0VaFiWLLNOctober 6, 2024

In an interesting coincidence, Twitter’s momomo_us uncovered an HP Omen 35L gaming desktop listing this weekend (Tweet embedded above).  According to the screenshot, it features the aforementioned Intel Core Ultra 9 285K at its heart. The listing confirms and highlightsthe CPU specs, and boasts that it offers up to 5.70 GHz turbo boost, 36MB of cache, and 24 cores with 24 threads. We assume that the dire PassMark multi-threaded result vs the 14900KS may be largely due to the thread deficit – with the Arrow Lake only having 24 threads, vs the Raptor Lake Refresh with its 24C/32T configuration.

Concerning the poor multi-threaded performance shown here, we also have to bear in mind that this is a sample of one, and it has been flagged as an engineering sample. Furthermore, there may be motherboard / BIOS plus tuning to be done – as well as other tweaks – before Arrow Lake systems are ready for prime time.

Arrow Lake-S isn’t a long way off, though. The newLGA 1851 processorsand 800 series motherboards like top-endZ890 productsshould be with us later this month.

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Mark Tyson is a news editor at Tom’s Hardware. He enjoys covering the full breadth of PC tech; from business and semiconductor design to products approaching the edge of reason.