Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Intel’s next-gen CPUs are leaving a big feature behind

A Core i9-12900KS processor sits on its box.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Intel has confirmed that its next-gen Arrow Lake CPUs are arriving this year, but it looks like they’ll arrive missing a feature of the last few generations. Arrow Lake, and its corresponding 800-series chipset, is dropping support for DDR4 memory and moving exclusively to DDR5, according to a new leak shared on Chiphell.

The leaked slide shows that the CPU will instead use dual-channel DDR5. That’s hardly surprising, as we’ve suspected for a while that Intel would move onto DDR5 exclusively as soon as it switched sockets. The socket swap is coming with Arrow Lake, as Intel leaves behind the LGA 1700 socket we’ve seen for the past three generations and moves onto the new LGA 1851 socket.

Recommended Videos

Still, support for DDR4 and DDR5 memory has been a key feature for the last several generations of Intel CPUs. Unlike AMD’s Ryzen 7000 chips, Intel decided to support both memory standards to keep upgrades cheaper. Not only is DDR4 much cheaper than DDR5, the motherboards that support DDR4 are cheaper, as well. That made Intel’s 12th-, 13th-, and 14th-gen CPUs a cheaper upgrade compared to AMD, allowing builders to bring along their old memory.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Since the introduction of the Core i9-12900K — when Intel first introduced its dual memory standard support — prices for DDR5 have dropped significantly, however. A couple of years ago, you could easily spend $200 to $250 on a 32GB kit of DDR5 memory. Today, you can get , and that’s with fast speeds and RGB lighting.

Although there’s sure to be a select few who are sore about Intel dropping DDR4 support, it’s probably the best move. DDR4 motherboards among the last three generations haven’t been the most popular options, and with DDR5 dropping in price, it’s a perfect time for Intel to move on.

The leak also revealed some other key details about the platform. Most notably, it showed that the CPU will have a total of 20 dedicated PCIe 5.0 lanes — 16 for the GPU and four for storage. That joins an additional four lanes of PCIe 4.0. In the previous generation, Intel only offered up 16 PCIe 5.0 lanes, meaning you would need to choose between a GPU and storage. We don’t have any PCIe 5.0 GPUs yet, but it’s good to know that Arrow Lake will be set up to take advantage of them when they arrive.

Although Intel has said Arrow Lake CPUs are arriving this year, we don’t have an exact date yet. The next release on the docket comes from Intel’s Lunar Lake laptop CPUs, which are said to arrive in September. Intel will likely talk more about Arrow Lake at its Innovation event later this year, which takes place on September 24.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Intel’s upcoming Arrow Lake CPUs might run into cooling trouble
The cold plate and heat pipes on the Noctua NH-D15 G2 CPU cooler.

By nearly all accounts, Intel is gearing up to release its 15th-gen Arrow Lake CPUs in a matter of weeks. The new generation, which will compete for a slot among the best processors, will use the new LGA 1851 socket, and the redesigned package might be problematic when it comes to keeping the CPU cool.

According to famed overclocker and YouTuber der8auer, the hot spot on Arrow Lake CPUs is "quite a bit further north," meaning that the hottest part of the CPU is situated at the top of the package. Different hot spot locations is nothing new -- for instance, AMD's Ryzen 9 9950X has a hot spot more toward the southern part of the package -- but it's something that cooling companies will need to account for in order to get the best performance.

Read more
Intel’s instability update cuts speed by up to 6.5% — but don’t panic yet
Intel Core i5-14600K processor inside its socket.

Intel has finally gotten a grip on its disastrous instability problems that have been the bane of some of Intel's best processors for nearly a year, including the Core i9-13900K and Core i9-14900K. The update was released last week, and users are now taking it out for a spin. And unfortunately, some are reporting performance drops of up to 6.5%.

A user on the Chiphell forums tested the new BIOS patch that is supposed to address instability on Intel's 13th-gen and 14th-gen CPUs. The user twfox saw a drop of around 6.5% with the Core i9-13900K in Cinebench R15's single-core test, at least compared against Wccftech's own tests. In the more recent Cinebench R23, the Core i9-14900K dropped about 2% of its multi-core score, falling behind AMD's Ryzen 9 7950X.

Read more
Intel may have been right about killing Hyper-Threading after all
A Core i9-12900KS processor sits on its box.

Intel is getting rid of one of the features that has defined most of the best processors for more than a decade -- Hyper-Threading. It's the branded name Intel uses for simultaneous multi-threading, or SMT, and the company has already confirmed it won't use SMT on its upcoming Lunar Lake mobile CPUs. Rumor has it the company is also ditching SMT for its Arrow Lake desktop CPUs. Surprisingly, according to new leaks, killing SMT might have been the right call after all.

A handful of benchmarks have leaked for Arrow Lake CPUs. Starting off, the Core Ultra 7 265K and Core Ultra 9 285K both popped up in the Geekbench 6 database. The flagship Core Ultra 9 is a 24-core part, and it achieved a score of 21,075 in Geekbench 6's multi-core test. That's slightly above what you'll see with the Ryzen 9 9950X and on-par with the Core i9-14900K, both of which come with 32 threads due to SMT.

Read more