System Performance: Hybrid CPU Design

With the new hybrid CPU design available in Alder Lake there are now 20 threads available. The system features six P-Core, and each P-Core offers simultaneous multithreading with two threads per core, meaning there are twelve threads available on the P-Cores. The E-Cores are single-threaded only, and there are eight E-Cores. The new Thread Director from Intel coupled with Windows 11’s thread scheduler is aware of the cores being high-performance and low-performance and will tend to assign work accordingly; but if the system is not busy and the workload is in the foreground and multi-threaded, it will schedule threads across all 20 cores if needed. If an active task is moved to the background by the user, by either minimizing the task or opening another workload, the background task is allocated to the E-Cores and the P-Cores are prioritized for user-focused work.

This means that even on a heavily loaded system, system responsiveness should be maintained, and although the user will not have their full system performance available, the P-Cores will be prioritized for active workloads instead of background tasks. For our standard performance testing, benchmarks are always run as the only active task so that the results are representative, but for this review we will also cover some multi-tasking scenarios in a bit.

To test system performance, the system was set to dedicated graphics mode since this is the way most Desktop Replacement systems will be run, and the MSI laptop was set to its maximum performance setting.

PCMark 10

PCMark 10 - Essentials

PCMark 10 - Productivity

PCMark 10 - Digital Content Creation

PCMark 10 - Overall

UL’s PCMark is a full-system benchmark which not only measures CPU performance, but also memory, storage, and graphics. It is being included as a reference since we always include it in laptop reviews, but be aware that the MSI Raider GE76 now offers the RTX 3080L Ti GPU, which is a step above the RTX 3080L found in the 2021 MSI GE76 Raider. As with all laptop testing, it is almost impossible to have a completely apples to apples comparison. The Raider GE76 also ships with much faster DDR5-4800 memory, an advantage of the Alder Lake platform.

That being said, the new Alder Lake system is by far the quickest notebook we have ever tested on PCMark 10. Some of that is CPU, and some is GPU, and some is memory, and some is storage. As was said at the start, Intel is putting their best foot forward, and it is hard to blame them.

Cinebench R20

Cinebench R20 - Single-Threaded Benchmark

Cinebench R20 - Multi-Threaded Benchmark

Always a popular benchmark due to its ease of use and ability to set the test to be single-threaded or multi-threaded, Cinebench is more of a pure CPU test since it does not leverage the GPU at all and is not very memory intensive.

Tiger Lake had a small single-threaded performance lead over the latest Ryzen processors, and Alder Lake simply smashes both of them. The single-threaded performance uplift is seriously impressive.

On the multi-threaded side, AMD’s better power efficiency with Ryzen allowed them to pull ahead in the past, but now that Alder Lake features 20 threads compared to 16 in the Ryzen 9 5900HX, the Core i9-12900HK pulls well in front with all threads loaded. This is despite it having only twelve threads of performance cores, so the eight E-Cores are definitely pulling their weight here.

Handbrake

Handbrake Transcoding (Software)

Probably the most popular transcoding tool around, Handbrake has support for software-based transcoding as well has hardware-based with support for AMD’s VCE, NVIDIA’s NVENC and Intel QuickSync. We test by doing a transcode of a 1080p Blu-Ray rip to 720p with the same quality settings for all encoders. For most transcoding, software transcoding tends to yield the best quality, however the specialty hardware can often complete the task in less time.

As a heavily multithreaded task, AMD’s Cezanne platform was our previous champ here, but Alder Lake demolishes the previous results. The new Golden Cove / Gracemont combination offers an almost 30% uptick compared to Tiger Lake in the same chassis. If you peek down to the Hardware transcode graph, you will see that the new Alder Lake platform is actually quicker at this particular test than the QuickSync was on Tiger Lake. Very impressive.

Handbrake Transcoding (Hardware)

Speaking of hardware transcoding, Intel’s QuickSync does get a bump over Tiger Lake’s implementation, but perhaps unsurprisingly they are smashed by the NVIDIA encoders in the big graphics cards installed in the MSI Raider systems.

7-Zip

7-Zip Compression

7-Zip Decompression

Despite a massive uplift in compression speed in the Core i9-12900HK, Intel isn’t quite able to wrestle the decompression crown away from AMD’s Ryzen 9 5900HX, although it is much, much closer than it was before.

Web Tests

Although web performance is an integral part of most people’s lives now, testing web performance is both testing the CPU performance as well as the browser’s scripting engine. As such, to be as consistent as possible, all web benchmarks are run on the current version of Microsoft Edge, which is based on the Chromium web browser. However, updates to the browser which happen very frequently could impact performance, so any results we have in our database are snapshots from the time that laptop was reviewed. For now, with the decommissioning of several popular browser benchmarks, we are focusing on Speedometer 2.0 from Webkit, and WebXPRT 3 from Principled Technologies. WebXPRT 4 is in preview now, and once it launches, we will take a look at it for future reviews.

Speedometer 2.0

WebXPRT 3

Web performance is often dependent on single-threaded performance, as well as how quickly a processor can ramp up to maximum performance. Both AMD and Intel have made big improvements in how quickly their processors can boost to their maximum frequency, as well as how many steps there are on the way.

With Intel’s hefty increase in single-threaded performance with the Golden Cove CPU architecture it should be no surprise to see them at the top. How far they are in front though is very impressive.

System Performance Summary

Wow is a good word to summarize. Intel’s newest Alder Lake with its new hybrid design, featuring both Golden Cove and Gracemont CPU cores, delivers a substantial increase in performance over their outgoing Tiger Lake platform. With six P-Cores and eight E-Cores, the new Core i9-12900HK offers an impressive twenty threads. With dissimilar performance of the threads, extra legwork was needed to be done to correctly distribute workloads to the right cores, but Intel has done that with their Thread Director system which is integrated into Windows 11.

Intel has squarely thrown the ball back into AMD’s court. Intel now lead in CPU performance by a substantial margin, and Intel’s Iris Xe graphics also delivers more performance than the current Vega GPU in Ryzen 5000. This is a potent combination.

The Test Platform: MSI's Raider GE76 Platform Power and Multitasking
Comments Locked

153 Comments

View All Comments

  • Kamen Rider Blade - Tuesday, January 25, 2022 - link

    So the ASUS G513QY w/ it's Ryzen 9 5900HX + Radeon 6800M + It's display / Memory don't also impact power consumption?

    That the ASUS that you chose wasn't similar enough?
  • Brett Howse - Tuesday, January 25, 2022 - link

    Of course they do. AMD does way better on battery life but not because of the CPU. That's the point I've been trying to convey.

    AMD's power gating on their GPU is very impressive.

    You said Alder Lake is "max performance with no regards to Fuel/Energy Efficiency" but in both the AMD system and the Intel system, neither CPU is the determining factor for battery life. They are almost irrelevant. Even in a thin and light system with no GPU, the display draws more power than any other component including the CPU.

    I would love an apples to apples comparison but I don't have a Raider GE76 with RTX 3080 Ti and Ryzen 5900HX. Sadly we are constrained by what we have been provided to test, and what manufacturers build.
  • Kamen Rider Blade - Tuesday, January 25, 2022 - link

    =(
  • Kamen Rider Blade - Tuesday, January 25, 2022 - link

    MSI Raider GE76
    CPU = Intel Core i9-12900HK w/ 85 Watts TDP
    GPU = NVIDIA RTX 3080 Ti for Laptops
    RAM = 32 GB DDR5-4800
    Display = 17.3" 2K | 1080p @ 360 Hz
    Battery = 99.9 Wh

    Asus ROG Strix G15 G513QY
    CPU = AMD Ryzen 9 5900HX __ w/ 45 Watts TDP
    GPU = AMD Radeon RX 6800M
    RAM = 16 GB DDR4-3200
    Display = 15.6" 2K | 1080p @ 300 Hz
    Battery = 90.0 Wh
  • IntelUser2000 - Wednesday, January 26, 2022 - link

    5900HX in the G15 isn't running at 45W, that's his whole point, but either you are choosing to ignore it or didn't see it.

    "The ASUS G513QY with the AMD Ryzen 9 5900HX has a similar system, and it also draws around 85 Watts in its maximum performance mode on a 45-Watt processor."

    That's the *same* power as Alderlake-H.
  • undervolted_dc - Wednesday, January 26, 2022 - link

    alder lake it's not at maximum performance mode 85w, it's 115w a good test should account for power and price, a cpu which cost 2x because it's the super top 1% binning for 10% median better perf in benchmarks or that consume 2x for the same should be accounted in each bench results, top performance is a factor but the most important one for laptops are perf/watt/price and for servers is perf/TCO , perf alone is useless ( or useful to reach a certain wanted point from the press.... )
  • Kamen Rider Blade - Tuesday, January 25, 2022 - link

    The specs are similar enough, the only difference is that extra 1.7" display diagonal and extra 16 GB of RAM, but MSI has the more efficient DDR5 instead of older DDR4.

    MSI also has an extra 9.9 Wh to it's advantage.

    Yet the AlderLake laptop was "UnImpressive"
  • jjjag - Wednesday, January 26, 2022 - link

    Brett you are hilarious trying to reason with a fanboi. It's like trying to convince a trumper to get vaxxed because of all the past success we've had with smallpox and polio. For them, it's a religious argument. "Religious" because it ignores all real data and observations, and it just makes them feel better about themselves to hate something. But A+ for trying!
  • TheinsanegamerN - Friday, January 28, 2022 - link

    Funny, I didnt know the black community was full of trumpers. Or the hispanic community, for that matter......
  • Sunrise089 - Wednesday, January 26, 2022 - link

    But Brett, you’re giving the Intel system credit for the GPU+memory+storage. I don’t understand the rationale behind crediting the PCMark scores to Alder Lake but ‘crediting’ the poor battery life to MSI.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now