In addition to the absurd 6GHz speeds, Intel also claims that it had already achieved a world overclocking record with said Raptor Lake CPU by pushing it to run at 8GHz. Naturally, all this was achieved via the use of liquid nitrogen (LN2). Notably, the speed that the chipmaker is claiming is faster than AMD’s recently announced Ryzen 9 7950X, which boasts an equally absurd boost clock of 5.7GHz out of the box.

DDR5-56001st 6 GHz8 GHz OC World Record pic.twitter.com/7uTRMStRs3 — Andreas Schilling 🇺🇦 (@aschilling) September 12, 2022 Circling back to the high-octane Raptor Lake CPU, there isn’t any clear indication if this souped-up CPU will be hitting the market with the first wave of 13th generation CPUs or if Intel intends to release it as a special “KS” model, much like it did with the current 12th generation Alder Lake Core i9-12900KS. Additionally, the chipmaker still isn’t giving out too many details about the processor but has said that this model will have a 15% gain in single-threaded performance, a 41% gain in multi-threaded workloads, and an overall “40% performance scaling”. Another reason for the increased focus on Raptor Lake was confirmed by industrial analyst Dr Ian Cutress, and it is honestly a rare admission on Intel’s part; the only reason Raptor Lake exists is that the chipmaker isn’t able to get Meteor Lake done or ready in time for launch. Seeing how its 13th generation lineup is essentially an improved version of its current 12th generation Alder Lake SKUs, that admission actually makes a lot of sense.

– Isic Silas, Intel Corp VP of CCG. — 𝐷𝑟. 𝐼𝑎𝑛 𝐶𝑢𝑡𝑟𝑒𝑠𝑠 (@IanCutress) September 12, 2022 Intel is expected to announce the Raptor Lake series later this month and more specifically, 27 September, the same day that AMD’s Ryzen 7000 series CPUs officially go on sale. (Source: Videocardz, Tom’s Hardware, Twitter [1] [2])