It is just me or does this SKU feel a bit ... redundant? I mean, sure, it outperforms the 12400 ... barely. I know Intel are the absolute masters of incremental product segmentation, and I guess the answer to the question of "why does this SKU exist?" is "it's $30 more than a 12400 yet costs the same to produce", but ... well, I guess it makes sense when you're operating on the scale of Intel. Still seems unnecessary to me.
Quite interesting to see just how much faster the 12600K manages to be though. A mostly irrelevant difference in gaming, but definitely there in productivity. Those E cores definitely help in heavily threaded tasks that can make use of them (or for keeping lightweight background tasks out of the way of higher performance ones).
It's surely less redundant than the 10600, which differed ONLY from the 10600K in being 4.8 GHz locked, rather than 4.8 GHz unlocked.
Here the SKUs are:
* i3-12100 -4.3 GHz, sensible chip
* i3-12300 -4.4 GHz, uh.....
* i5-12400 - 4.4 GHz - the popular chip
* i5-12500 - 4.6GHz, bigger IGP
* i5-12600 - 4.8 GHz
* i5-12600K - 4.9 GHz, more cores, unlocked
Here there's a BIG difference to the 12600K, the only question is price.