January 29, 2026
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Intel is Back!
Intel’s latest laptop processors, known as either Panther Lake or Series 3, mark one of the most important turning points the company has had in years.
With the launch of Panther Lake and, in particular, the Core Ultra X9, Intel is finally delivering something many Windows users have been waiting for: strong performance and excellent efficiency in the same machine.
The new Core Ultra X9 combines two traits that previously felt mutually exclusive in x86 laptops:
The result is something genuinely new for Windows laptops: powerful CPU performance, impressive integrated graphics, quiet operation, and strong battery life—all in thin and light designs.
Even more impressive is the integrated GPU. Intel’s new Arc graphics rival entry-level Nvidia GPUs at lower wattages, while remaining cool and quiet. Because the processor is so efficient, manufacturers can package this performance into laptops that stay silent and barely get warm.
Intel released 14 different Panther Lake CPUs, which can be broadly divided into three categories depending on who they’re for.
These are Intel’s highest-end Panther Lake chips.
These chips replace last year’s Arrow Lake H (Core Ultra Series 2) processors, but with noticeably better efficiency.
These processors still use higher core-count CPUs but come with a much smaller 4-core GPU.
They also replace Arrow Lake H chips, offering improved battery life compared to last generation.
These are the lower core count Panther Lake processors. Either 8 or 6 cores with the same 4-core GPU.
As usual, Intel’s naming makes things more confusing than necessary:
In CPU benchmarks like Geekbench and Cinebench:
Performance alone doesn’t tell the full story. Where Panther Lake really shines is efficiency.
At similar power levels, the Core Ultra X9 now delivers better performance than AMD’s Ryzen 9 HX 370, something that would have been unthinkable a year ago. Compared to Lunar Lake, the 16-core X9 delivers around 60% more performance at the same power draw.
Apple still leads in raw efficiency, especially with higher-core M-series chips, but Intel has closed the gap significantly.
Thanks to improved efficiency:
This makes Panther Lake especially appealing in thin and light designs, where noise and heat are usually major compromises.
Intel’s Arc B390 integrated GPU is one of the most impressive aspects of Panther Lake.
In cross-platform benchmarks, it even edges out Apple’s base M-series GPU in some cases, which is a major milestone for Intel.
At 1080p with high settings:
Intel also introduced multi-frame generation via XeSS, allowing frame rates to increase dramatically in supported games. While average FPS improves significantly, 1% lows don’t always scale as much—something also seen with Nvidia’s frame generation.
In terms of performance per watt:
This level of GPU efficiency is one of Panther Lake’s strongest advantages.
For creative workloads:
For casual creators and lighter projects, Panther Lake is absolutely viable. For professionals exporting complex projects daily, higher-end GPUs and Macs still make more sense.
Battery performance is one of the most impressive aspects of Panther Lake:
When normalized for battery size, Panther Lake still ranks near the top, showing that efficiency—not just big batteries—is doing the heavy lifting.
Panther Lake feels like a defining moment for Intel. While it may not match the scale of Apple’s original M1 disruption, the overall package—performance, efficiency, graphics, and battery life—represents a massive step forward.
These are laptops people are likely to keep for many years.
Over the coming weeks, we’ll be reviewing more Panther Lake laptops and testing the rest of the lineup. If you’re shopping soon, this is one of the most exciting Intel generations we’ve seen in a long time.