Saturday, November 9th 2024
Intel Working on Fixing "Arrow Lake" Gaming Performance with Upcoming Patches
In an exclusive interview with Hot Hardware, Intel acknowledged that its recently launched Core Ultra 200 desktop processors, codenamed "Arrow Lake," have significant performance issues. However, Intel announced that a set of fixes are being developed. As our review confirmed, the launch of these new processors fell short of both consumer expectations and Intel's own projections, particularly in gaming performance, despite showing promise in productivity, content creation, and some AI workloads. In a discussion during a recent livestream, Intel's Robert Hallock, VP and general manager of client AI and technical marketing, addressed these concerns head-on, describing the Arrow Lake launch as "disastrous" and attributing the underwhelming performance to inadequately optimized systems.
Source:
Hot Hardware
Robert HallockI can't go into all the details yet, but we identified a series of multifactor issues at the OS level, at the BIOS level, and I will say that the performance we saw in reviews is not what we expected and not what we intended. The launch just didn't go as planned. That has been a humbling lesson for all of us, inspiring a fairly large response internally to get to the bottom of what happened and to fix it.Additionally, Hallock indicated that users can expect these updates to begin rolling out by the end of the month or shortly after that. The tech community awaits independent verification of these performance improvements, which could restore confidence in Intel's Arrow Lake platform and potentially reshape the current CPU performance hierarchy. Given that the promise is a "significant" performance uplift, we expect to see some interesting numbers as Intel's cores are performant from the microarchitectural standpoint. The mix of Windows and BIOS updates will be interesting to measure in the coming weeks. Here is the link to the video interview of the Hot Hardware crew and Robert Hallock.
91 Comments on Intel Working on Fixing "Arrow Lake" Gaming Performance with Upcoming Patches
I find this an interesting statement to make, as Intel's own marketing slides showed the same performance issues as reviewers did...
And to reiterate my main point; software isn't going to change much. What we see in Linux tests (e.g. from Phoronix) is probably the best case we can get. It's a small step forward, but mostly this archtecture is laying the groundwork for future generations, which buyers of Arrow Lake will have no benefit from. There is Xeon W, which isn't that expensive considering the pricing of "high-end" mainstream motherboards these days.
But Intel (and AMD) is missing out on a huge opportunity by not having a proper HEDT platform any more, a platform like:
- CPUs starting at 8 p-cores, decent (but consistent) clock speeds, 250W TDP(without crazy boost), smaller socket with "standard" cooler support.
- 4-channel unregistered ecc/non-ecc
- ~64 CPU PCIe lanes
- Great motherboards at ~$400.
Which would sell great compared to the increasingly useless and unbalanced mainstream platforms from either vendor. In many cases, SMT actually makes gaming worse, as having multiple threads competing for a core creates more latency and inconsistency in multithreading than having p-cores and e-cores, and a hybrid archtecture would in fact perform better if Windows wasn't using an antiquated kernel.
Even those games which may use more than 8 threads wouldn't have all of these synchronized, as that scales terribly. Usually you might see 2-3 threads completely pegged down and synchronized, and the rest as async worker threads. One thing of note is how much more consistent games could be with better software; some years ago I was working on a rendering engine and testing it on Linux with the standard kernel and a "semi-realtime" kernel, the difference was astounding. While the realtime kernel probably lost ~0.5% average FPS, it was silky smooth and nearly all signs of microstutter disappeared. Applications were smoother too. But the disadvantage; much higher idle load, which is probably why we don't see this shipped as standard. But at the very least, it goes to show that things could be so much better than the jerky stuttery mess we know as Windows today. We've had this silly argument for probably two decades. :rolleyes:
When you run benchmarks with unrealistic hardware/software configurations, you are not eliminating the GPU as a factor; you are in fact introducing artificial bottlenecks which real world users never will run into. Only people who don't know how software scales would think this is a good idea. How a CPU performs in workloads far removed from anything you will ever actually use it for, shouldn't determine your purchasing decisions. And it's not going to tell you anything useful of which CPU is going offer better longevity in gaming performance either. On the contrary, when future games increases their computational load, the CPU with more computational power is going to pull ahead of the weaker CPU with lots of L3 cache.
:nutkick:
Bro.
Bro.
He went on a podcast to talk about Arrow Lake.
That should have been a hint to him to have all the answers to all the possible questions about Arrow Lake.
And one of the most obvious possible questions is "why is Arrow Lake performance shit?"
The fact that he could not convincingly answer that question except with "not what we expected" suggests only one of three possibilities:
1. Hallock is incompetent
2. Intel is incompetent
3. Both 1 and 2
Now when you are talking publicly regarding fears that your CPUs are shit, what's the best way to calm that audience down and restore confidence? Is it to:
a. Obfuscate the truth and hint that fixes are coming
b. Claim you have no fucking idea what is going on, but fixes are coming (how can you fix something when you don't know what the actual problem is?)
I'll give you a hint: it's not b.
Hallock is in marketing. His job is not to be honest, it's to reassure customers that Intel is making great products, yet everything he said in that interview did the exact opposite. Does that sound like someone who is doing a good job to you? EPYC 8024P would cover all above needs, what's missing are consumer-oriented socket SP6 motherboards. Take the ASRock Rack SIENAD8-2L2T and remove MCIO, 1GbE, 10GbE and BMC (saves 16 PCIe 5.0 lanes); add 2.5GbE, WiFi and 8x SATA ports (-8 lanes) and two ASM4124 chipsets for four USB4 type-C ports (-8 lanes); and bob's your auntie.
But that might be a national difference, it seems that most people in the US see marketing as communication while communication in France is something that's done after the marketing gathered all the data necessary to make an effective communication. I have a bachelor's in communication, and we've been taught the basic principles of marketing, but we weren't meant to become marketers, there's a specific bachelor's for that that goes deeper into it.
Translated from french. As you can see there's a separate specialization course for the students choosing to specialise themselve in marketing or in communication.
I would guess these new fixes will help any setup with e cores, not just ARL -- at least I hope. The performance over the 2 years I owned the 13700KF started out amazing and then just slowly eroded with every windows patch.
windows 10 clean install
Windows 11 24h2 clean install
Take a look at one I uploaded - 2:39 minute market, it's 22h2 vs 24h2. Massive difference in 1% lows (up to 50 fps, lol).
C'mon Intel, fix this so AMD has a minimum of pressure to stop reselling the same old IO dies and chipsets.
... AMD struggles too...
Recent cpu releases is a good scenario for a sitcom!
promising to fix it... with software :kookoo:
Let's say, I am not optimistic regarding this generation of intel CPU-s :rolleyes:
Ps, my lightbulb just gone bust, maybe they could write some code to fixt that too :D
As others have pointed out, Intel & partners have had intermediate silicon/software and known the expected performance for a while. The reviewer guidance Intel provided was consistent with independent benchmark results.
Even if this "fix" corrects some of the gaming performance issues with Arrow Lake, the damage has already been done. Those of us who are clued into what's going on have more than likely already switched to AMD. And unfortunately for Intel, those who have already switched to AMD are probably going to stay with AMD seeing as how they plan on keeping with the AM5 platform for years to come. Suffice it to say, Intel shouldn't have released Arrow Lake until it was ready because damn did they shoot themselves in the foot with a 12-gauge shotgun.
TBF I am glad I skipped that gen, went from Phenom to Core i7 920 and spent a few years with Intel before going back to AMD when Ryzen landed and I could get a 6c/12t CPU for less than $200 which was unheard of before Ryzen and kept to Intel HEDT lineup :eek:
no microcode update is going to make the imc suckless
no microcode update is going to make the IPC better (short of disabling security mitigations)
in chasing power consumption intel flubbed and cut to much out of the cores. disabling HT comes at a cost of not having those extra execution thread handling resources which help all around performance
also get a new chip ready asap
And if gaming 1440p or 4K no need for fastest CPU
I 'll ask again:
It's actually funny to see intel's redemption after 7-year long quad core stagnation back in the 2010's. If team blue doesn't manage to produce something similiar to 3d cache, intel is indeed destined to repeat Bulldozer's fate.
i wouldnt mind a core ultra cpu...
it will be a decent upgrade to my current cpu..