Recently, a user shared benchmark test results for the Intel Bartlett Lake series Core 9 273QPE processor. This model was originally designed for the embedded market, but after users modified it to run stably on consumer-grade Z790 motherboards, the relevant benchmark data was leaked.

The user’s published test results show that the Core 9 273QPE scored 33,111 points in the Cinebench R23 multi-core test. The running status shows that its all-core boost frequency reached 5.4GHz, and the processor’s TDP was 286W. Since this processor is described as a “pure 12-core” design, these results were also used to observe its multi-threaded performance in a configuration without small cores.

This benchmark test was conducted on a modified Z790 desktop motherboard, under non-native platform conditions, and successfully completed stress and benchmark tests. Several users have shared their experiences running and testing this processor, but the specific platform configurations, BIOS settings, and cooling conditions of different users are not uniformly disclosed in the same materials, so the comparability of scores still needs to be understood in conjunction with their individual environments.
Cinebench R23 is a commonly used multi-core performance benchmark for desktop CPUs. In publicly available desktop processor performance summaries, the AMD Ryzen 9 9900X3D scored 2258 points in the single-core ranking; while in earlier GeekBench 4.2 database records, the Intel i9-9900K scored 33037 points in the multi-core ranking.