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AMD might finally beat Intel for the fastest mobile gaming CPU

This generation’s mobile flagship, AMD’s Ryzen 9 7945HX, was only discovered in some preliminary benchmarks. According to the test findings, AMD may be seriously competitive in gaming laptops this year.

The CPU outperformed its last generation equivalents by a wide margin and, while having a far smaller number of cores, maintained up with Intel’s top processors.

During CES 2023, AMD first unveiled the Zen 4 mobile versions. The CPUs are now beginning to show up in laptops. The flagship Ryzen 9 7945HX is making a remarkable comeback with some Geek bench 5 results, which we initially saw with the Ryzen 9 7845HX.

The CPU is a part of AMD’s “Dragon Range” portfolio of gaming-focused products. It has 16 cores and 32 threads and can run at 5.4 GHz at 55 watts, however it will probably run faster if the full TDP is employed (75 watts). The number of cores has doubled when compared to the Rembrandt CPUs of the previous generation; the top chip in that iteration only has eight cores and 16 threads.

The Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 16, a gorgeous laptop with a dual screen and some of this generation’s greatest hardware, including an up to Nvidia RTX 4090 mobile GPU, was the Processor used in this testing. Although the GPU utilized is unknown to us, it was certainly one of Nvidia’s top models. Moreover, the laptop has 32GB of DDR5 Memory.

The Ryzen 9 7945HX is near the top of the list based on the highest score it can receive, and this covers both desktop CPUs and laptop chips. In the single-core and multi-core Geek bench 5 tests, the CPU received scores of 2,217 and 19,403, respectively.

With that result, AMD is the current winner in single-core when it comes to mobile CPUs, and it’s not far behind Intel’s Core i9-13980HX in multi-core tests. But, when we factor in the average results, which are a little lower than the best, Intel comes out on top in both categories, albeit by a narrow margin.

It’s also remarkable how close the Ryzen 9 7945HX is to the desktop Ryzen 9 7900X, and in single-core, it’s practically keeping up with the Ryzen 9 7950X. Given the significant TDP differential (170 watts against 55 watts), the mobile processor does exceptionally well in these benchmarks.

Massive improvements are also visible when compared to the previous generation. The Ryzen 9 6900HX has an average score of 9,909 points, which is more than twice as fast in multi-core activities. With the Zen 3 chip averaging 1,593 points, the single-core gap is not quite as significant but is nonetheless substantial.

It’s still a little too early to dub the Ryzen 9 7945HX the greatest AMD processor of the year. Scores from Geek bench 5 are one thing, but we still need to see how the CPU performs in actual gaming situations.

 

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