Intel i9-9900K Cinebench Score leaks via YouTube Video
How fast is an overclocked i9-9900K
Published: 17th September 2018 | Source: Lau Kin Lam - HKEPC |
Intel i9-9900K Cinebench Score leaks via YouTube Video
In this video, Intel's i9-9900K is able to achieve a multi-threaded score of 2166, a score that is extremely similar to a stock i9-7900X processor, a 10-core Skylake-X series processor.
When compared to AMD's 8-core, 16-thread Ryzen 7 2700X (which scored 1836 in out internal testing in Cinebench R15), Intel's i9-9900K delivers a score that is around 330 more points in Cinebench's Multi-core test, though it is worth noting that Intel's CPU is overclocked in this instance. Even so, this 5GHz i9-9900K score represents a performance boost of around 18% over a stock AMD Ryzen 7 2700X.
Sadly, this video doesn't contain a single-threaded benchmark score, though it is likely that this score would be somewhere in the region of 220 points, as this is what we have achieved with Intel's i7-8700K at 5GHz. Intel's i9-9900K is based on Intel's Coffee Lake architecture, making IPC gains unlikely.
Intel's i9-9900K is expected to release sometime within the next few months alongside the company's new Z390 series motherboard chipset. 9000 series CPUs will also be supported on other 300-series chipsets, including Z370 if they contain an up to date BIOS which supports Intel' latest processors.
You can join the discussion on Intel's i9-9900K benchmark leak on the OC3D Forums.
Most Recent Comments
When is this CPU getting released? All these leaks are getting silly, I wish Intel would just get those reviews out now...
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Intel are having supply issues.Quote
These leaks are because Intel is not ready. They are leaking stuff like this to keep people from buying AMD and make them wait.
Intel are having supply issues. |
None of the dates have changed.....Quote
These leaks are because Intel is not ready. They are leaking stuff like this to keep people from buying AMD and make them wait.
Intel are having supply issues. |
Luckily on that note we will get some real world testing and info/graphs shortly in a few days thanks to sites like OC3D

Mind you that being said Intel seem to be on a different planet when it comes to prices, so even if they were out they still wouldn't sell anywhere near as many as they would have before Ryzen crashed the party.
I think after all of these years people are finally beginning to realise you don't need a top end CPU for gaming.Quote