The packaging for the brand new lineup of Intel Arrow Lake gaming CPUs has simply leaked out, and exhibits that the forthcoming new Core Extremely 9 285K goes to return in a particular field, similar to the corporate’s earlier flagship chips. You would possibly assume the field is a negligible a part of the equation, significantly when there’s no cooler within the field any extra, however Intel is aware of the worth of packaging in relation to {hardware} lovers, and it seems to be prefer it desires its new chips to be below the highlight in unboxing movies.
Intel is anticipated to launch its new Arrow Lake gaming CPU lineup in October 2024, when they’ll go up towards the newest AMD Zen 5 chips in one of the best gaming CPU battle. If Intel can get the efficiency proper for the value, and keep away from the steadiness points which have plagued its 14th-gen Raptor Lake CPUs, then it could possibly be onto a winner, and it seems to be as if the corporate is hoping the packaging will entice some avid gamers to its new top-end chip.
All the brand new field designs are very black (none extra black?) in comparison with earlier Intel packaging designs, which have been primarily blue and white. Let’s begin with the Core Extremely 9 285K field, which has simply been leaked by Videocardz. It’s a deep package deal, with one other, strangely-angled silver field inside it. Frustratingly, we will’t see any extra of that interior silver field from the angle of the render, nevertheless it’s prone to be fancy. Up to now Intel has made interior silver bins that seem like wafers for its Core i9 12900K and 13900K CPUs, whereas its Core i9 9900K got here in a dodecahedron field, and the Core i9 11900K got here in an attractively-angled, translucent blue field.
This field leak additionally provides us a sign of the language it’ll use to tell apart between totally different generations of CPUs, now that it’s deserted utilizing phrases equivalent to “14th-gen.” The field clearly says ‘unlocked’ on the backside, displaying that it’ll have an unlocked multiplier for overclocking, and beneath this it says “Sequence 2.”
We’re going to imagine that “Sequence 2” is the time period Intel will use as an umbrella title for its Core Extremely 200 chips, following on from the Core Extremely 100 Meteor Lake CPUs it’s been utilizing in laptops this 12 months.
This “Sequence 2” title can also be used on the Core Extremely 7 and Core Extremely 5 CPU bins, which have simply been leaked by common tech leaker momomo_us in a publish on X (previously Twitter).
As with earlier Core i7 and Core i5 bins, these don’t have the flamboyant packaging with the interior field, and their thinness exhibits they received’t be coming with a CPU cooler both, though this has been normal for Intel’s Ok-series CPUs for a couple of years now. These packages are primary black bins that go large on the brand new Intel Core Extremely branding, with some blue dots on the highest and proper edges of the entrance face.
As at all times with leaks, keep in mind that none of those field renders have been formally launched by Intel, and as such they could not characterize the design of the ultimate packaging when it’s launched.
For extra details about these forthcoming new CPUs, try our Intel Arrow Lake information, the place we share all the things we find out about them, together with the specs and anticipated efficiency.