Entire Intel Core 200 laptop lineup leaks out — Intel prepping to launch 22 new mobile CPUs next month at CES 2025
A combination of three different architectures.
The beans have been spilled regarding Intel's Core 200 family of CPUs as data aggregator momomo_us has detailed the entire family across a series of tweets at X. The data misses out on key specifications such as core counts, but most of that information has been covered in the past. On that note, the leak includes retail ordering codes suggesting that these CPUs are already in the hands of OEMs as they ready their upcoming laptops.
To recap, Intel's Core 200 CPUs are divided into Ultra and non-Ultra SKUs. The Core 200 non-Ultra family will arrive as Raptor Lake refresh on budget laptops, akin to current-gen Core 100 offerings. Similarly, Core 200 Ultra CPUs get the latest Arrow Lake architecture - divided across the H and HX suffixes. Word of caution; the Core Ultra 200U processors are actually rumored to be a refresh of Meteor Lake rather than Arrow Lake, ported to Intel 3. It gets even more confusing as leaks allege the Core 200H family might incorporate LPE cores; absent from desktop Arrow Lake-S and flagship-grade mobile Arrow Lake-HX CPUs.
On the graphical side of things, Core Ultra 200 H/HX CPUs will employ the new Xe-LPG+ (Alchemist+) architecture with XMX cores, however, the Core Ultra 200U series is expected to stick with Xe-LPG as it is based on Meteor Lake - so you won't be able to use Intel's latest XeSS Frame Generation technology with these processors.
With those nuances aside, today's leak completes the puzzle of Intel's Core 200 lineup as we gaze upon the list of 22 upcoming mobile processors from Intel. We've decided to include the already-leaked HX series to give you a clearer picture.
Core 200U/H (Raptor Lake) | Core Ultra 200H (Arrow Lake) | Core Ultra 200U (Meteor Lake Refresh) | Core Ultra 200HX (Arrow Lake) |
---|---|---|---|
Core 9 270H | Core Ultra 9 285H | Core Ultra 7 265U | Core Ultra 9 285HX |
Core 7 250H | Core Ultra 7 265H | Core Ultra 7 255U | Core Ultra 9 275HX |
Core 7 240H | Core Ultra 7 255H | Core Ultra 5 235U | Core Ultra 7 265HX |
Core 5 220H | Core Ultra 5 235H | Core Ultra 5 225U | Core Ultra 7 255HX |
Core 5 210H | Core Ultra 5 225H | Row 4 - Cell 2 | Core Ultra 5 245HX |
Core 7 250U | Row 5 - Cell 1 | Row 5 - Cell 2 | Core Ultra 5 235HX |
Core 5 220U | Row 6 - Cell 1 | Row 6 - Cell 2 | Row 6 - Cell 3 |
Given the large variations between each suffix - going beyond simple core count and clock speed differences - users must exercise great caution when choosing a laptop next year. And it's not just Intel, AMD is also adjusting its existing offerings by re-releasing them under the new "Ryzen AI 300" branding.
Nonetheless, we expect all these processors to be announced at CES next month alongside budget 65W and 35W Arrow Lake processors. AMD will also roll out the Ryzen Z2 series, Krackan Point, and Strix Halo, side by side with its next-gen RDNA 4 Radeon RX 8000 GPUs. Laptops equipped with these processors should see availability in the following weeks.
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Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.
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Notton Well, that's not confusing at all.Reply
I guess you should just avoid all U-series, and all non-Ultra when buying yourself.
The only correct choices are Ultra-H, Ultra-HX, and Ultra-V, depending on needs and budget. -
usertests
What's Ultra-V? Oh right, Lunar Lake.Notton said:Well, that's not confusing at all.
I guess you should just avoid all U-series, and all non-Ultra when buying yourself.
The only correct choices are Ultra-H, Ultra-HX, and Ultra-V, depending on needs and budget.
U-series now has half the graphics units, maybe with the exception of Core 7 250U since it's old. -
Papusan Well, there you have it. This is why there is a huge lack of Arrow lake desktop chips in retail shops. Intel prefer use the expensive TSMC silicon for next gen new Jokebooks. Can't let AMD and Qualcomm take too big bite of their main market. And where the money is. Intel can't just lose this market.Reply -
User of Computers
not necessarily. This is MTL on Intel 3, so it should be a not-insubstantial efficiency improvement over vanilla MTL.Notton said:just avoid all U-series -
User of Computers
MTL-U-R (ARL-U) has the 4 xe core iGP (I'm not really sure what generation, all I "know" is that it's not Xe2), ARL-H has the 8 core iGP from MTL, except with XMX (so basically ACM+), ARL-HX is the same tile config as desktop maybe probably (idk), and RPL-R-R-R is using the tired old 96EU Xe-LP iGP from 2020.usertests said:What's Ultra-V? Oh right, Lunar Lake.
U-series now has half the graphics units, maybe with the exception of Core 7 250U since it's old. -
usertests
Yeah, 'U' chips stand for Underwhelming now. Which is a shame given that the iGPU is now on its own tile, so no relation to overall yields, and these chips can use plenty of power (example: Core Ultra 5 125U has a cTDP of 12-28W, and turbo TDP of 57W).User of Computers said:MTL-U-R (ARL-U) has the 4 xe core iGP (I'm not really sure what generation, all I "know" is that it's not Xe2), ARL-H has the 8 core iGP from MTL, except with XMX (so basically ACM+), ARL-HX is the same tile config as desktop maybe probably (idk), and RPL-R-R-R is using the tired old 96EU Xe-LP iGP from 2020.
RPL-U-R-R-R-R-R is tired, but at least it got the same amount of EUs/Xe cores as its 'H' brethren. -
bit_user
Headlines like this sort of bother me, as the word "out" is redundant/implied. It sure didn't leak into Intel!The headline said:Entire Intel Core 200 laptop lineup leaks out
Also, "leaks" has an odd temporal sense. It was an event that happened in the (recent) past, so it "leaked", "got leaked", or "was leaked". Maybe this sort of title comes from videos which actually show an event in progress, however it's misapplied to articles describing something that happened in the past.
I first noticed this phrasing on WCCFTech. I wonder if the author had previously written for them, or maybe just followed their site and picked up on it that way. -
bit_user Also, the table is kind of weird (although still very helpful). The different columns seem to have no relation to each other, even though at least the models numbers have some relation to each other.Reply
I think it makes little sense to combine U and H/HX models in the same table. So, here's just the U-models:
Core 200U (Raptor Lake)Core Ultra 200U (Meteor Lake Refresh)Core Ultra 7 265UCore Ultra 7 255UCore 7 250UCore Ultra 5 235UCore Ultra 5 225UCore 5 220U
And the H/HX ones:
Core 200H (Raptor Lake)Core Ultra 200H (Arrow Lake)Core Ultra 200HX (Arrow Lake)Core Ultra 9 285HCore Ultra 9 285HXCore Ultra 9 275HXCore 9 270HCore Ultra 7 265HCore Ultra 7 265HXCore Ultra 7 255HCore Ultra 7 255HXCore 7 250HCore Ultra 5 245HXCore 7 240HCore Ultra 5 235HCore Ultra 5 235HXCore Ultra 5 225HCore 5 220HCore 5 210H -
Mama Changa
To hoodwink the consumers. This will catch out a huge number of people that aren't tech nerds like us. Shameful marketing IMO and AMD is not really any different.Ogotai said:22 skus ? why ????
intels line up.. has always been so confusing.. and cluttered...