According to the leaker, the Core Ultra 7 356H scored 2013 points in the Cinebench R23 single-core benchmark and 20,721 points in the Cinebench R23 multi-core test, although the results are unconfirmed for now. For reference, this is slightly better than the upcoming Core Ultra 7 255H, which has two more P cores and two fewer E cores, and scores an average of about 18,679 points in the Cinebench R23 multicore benchmark. Single-core scores, on the other hand, are pretty even, with the 255H averaging around 2060 points in the R23 single-core benchmark. In the 3DMark Steel Nomad Light test, the Panther Lake iGPU scored 2,110 points. By comparison, the previous generation’s average score for the same benchmark ranges from 3,279 to 3,532 points, depending on whether the benchmark is running in DX12 or Vulkan mode. Future laptop CPUs will need to address issues such as: AMD’s new Ryzen AI 400 APUhas already started to be introduced into laptops, perform brilliantly Comparison with current generation Intel CPUs.
Leaked Intel Core Ultra 7 356H benchmark scores reveal moderate improvement
Intel Core Ultra 356H is the upcoming 16 core (4 P core, 12 E core) mobile Panther Lake CPU. Official review of Intel’s remaining Panther Lake CPUs is prohibited, but I was told it was just around the corner.Intel’s alleged latest performance benchmarks have already begun to leak, providing results for Cinebench R23 and 3DMark Steel Nomad Light. @realVictor_M from X. The results show that compared to Intel’s previous generation chips, multi-core performance is strong, but single-core scores are stagnant. The upcoming Core Ultra 7 255H’s Arc 140V iGPU also has significantly more cores than the new Intel Graphics 4 Xe3 iGPU in the Panther Lake chips, making the iGPU significantly slower as well.

