However, now it seems that Intel’s new Alder Lake Core i9 is pulling in impressive benchmark scores — ones that should make Apple sweat.Considering these tests are being done on beefy gaming laptops, though Intel’s chips might be the ones putting out all the heat. According to a report from Macworld (opens in new tab), when comparing Geekbench scores between the 10-core Apple M1 Max and the 14-core Intel Core i9-12900HK, the Windows 11-based machine pulled ahead of Cupertino by the slightest of margins. In single-core performance, Apple’s M1 Pro scored 1,774 compared to Intel’s 1,838 result. In multicore tests, the margins were just as thin between M1 Max and Alder Lake, with respective results of 12,590 and 13,235. These are ultimately negligible leads, within five percentage points.
Apple M1 Max vs. Intel Alder Lake Core i9
Now, there’s a major caveat to all of this — power consumption. Macworld is running M1 scores on thin and svelte 2021 MacBook Pros whereas Intel’s chip resides within the new MSI GE76 Raider, a heftier gaming PC that sports an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti Laptop GPU. According to Macworld, via its sister-site PCWorld (opens in new tab), during Cinebench R23 testing, the MSI GE76 Raider was consistently hitting a 100-watt power draw. That’s a massive step up from what AnandTech (opens in new tab) found when performing the same test on an M1 Max MacBook Pro. With Apple, the M1 Max was only drawing 39.7 watts. So, in this sense, it’s as if both chips were racing neck-and-neck, but Apple hadn’t even pushed the pedal halfway down. In PCWorld’s testing, the MSI GE76 Raider only lasted for 6 hours in offline video playback whereas the MacBook Pro managed 17 hours. In Geekbench 5 OpenCL graphics benchmarks, Intel completely destroyed Apple in performance. The Core i9-12900HX and Nvidia GeForce 3080 Ti Laptop scored an astonishing 143,594 to the M1 Max’s 59,774. Granted, this being a GPU comparison, a top-shelf dedicated Nvidia GPU would surely destroy any integrated graphics Apple could squeeze onto a CPU die. Intel’s integrated GPU scored a measly 21,097, for example. While these are just benchmark scores, and not necessarily indicative of real-world use, it does show that Intel has made great strides in laptop CPU performance. But Team Blue still has a long way to go to match Apple in power efficiency.