Reviews
of
Intel’s
new
Arrow
Lake-based
Core
Ultra
9
200S-series
processor
have
been
lackluster,
specifically
when
it
comes
to
gaming
performance,
but
Intel
says
that’s
not
the
end
of
the
story.
Its
new
chips
should
be
performing
better,
and
the
company
will
have
an
ETA
on
getting
them
there
soon,
according
to
Robert
Hallock,
Intel’s
VP
and
GM
of
client
AI
and
technical
marketing,
in
a
new
interview
with
HotHardware’s
Dave
Altavilla
and
Marco
Chiappetta.
Intel
was
up-front
in
saying
these
new
chips
wouldn’t
beat
AMD’s
chips
for
gaming.
But
reviewers’
findings
have
been
unexpectedly
poor.
Despite
some
efficiency
gains
like
those
noted
in
Tom
Warren’s
Verge
review
of
the
Core
Ultra
9
285K,
the
new
chip
seems
to
lag
behind
even
Intel’s
earlier
Raptor
Lake
chips
in
gaming.
That’s
to
say
nothing
of
its
performance
versus
AMD’s
very
good
Ryzen
9800X3D.
Intel’s
Arrow
Lake
chips’
“bones
are
solid,”
Hallock
said
during
the
interview.
Still,
the
company
has
identified
factors
“that
can
combine
to
produce
some
pretty
wild
unintended
effects.”
Hallock
was
also
clear
that
the
new
Arrow
Lake
performance
issues
are
strictly
Intel’s
responsibility,
and
not
the
fault
of
Microsoft
or
anyone
else.
As
for
when
Intel
will
provide
an
ETA
on
fixes,
Hallock
said
Intel
hopes
to
give
a
“comprehensive
update”
on
what
the
chip’s
issues
are
and
what’s
causing
them
by
the
end
of
November
or
early
December.
The
good
news
is
that
the
fix
will
be
easy,
according
to
Hallock,
who
called
it
a
“flash
the
BIOS
and
update
Windows
kinda
situation.”
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
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