According to our previous reports, the upcoming series will not be designated Core i5/i7/i9 14000X; instead, it will adopt a naming structure similar to that of the Arrow Lake chips.

The new naming convention will exclude the term "Ultra" and will maintain the "Core 5/7/9 200H" classification. Recently, we obtained information regarding one of its chips from @Benchleaks, which has undergone multiple benchmark tests on Geekbench. This chip is the budget-oriented 10-core Core 7 240H CPU, observed in the Acer Nitro ANV15-52 gaming laptop, which also features a discrete RTX 4050 mobile GPU.

Both the CPU and integrated GPU (iGPU) have been benchmarked, revealing its potential performance. Surprisingly, the 240H has outperformed the 14-core Core 7 250H, which possesses four additional cores and threads. The 250H recorded scores of 2415 points in single-core and 13201 points in multi-core benchmarks, while the 240H demonstrated a significant performance boost with scores of 2687/2689 in single-core and 13330/13279 in multi-core tests.

Remarkably, these results exceed those of the desktop 10-core Core Ultra 5 225F processor in the Arrow Lake lineup, raising questions about the value of purchasing the 225F. The 240H operates at a base clock of 5 GHz and can boost up to 5.0 GHz. It also shares an L3 cache of 24 MB, consistent with the Core 7 250H.

Regarding the iGPU specifications and performance, it will feature an Intel Xe-based iGPU with 64 Compute Units, equivalent to 8 Xe Cores, and a maximum clock speed of 1. Additionally, Intel will introduce the Core 200U series, aimed at ultra-low systems. While an exact release date has yet to be confirmed, it is anticipated for CES 2025.