Intel officially releases its 10th Gen H-series mobile CPUs

Intel Comet Lake H CPUs
(Image credit: Intel)

Intel has finally officially announced its 10th Generation H-series mobile CPUs. Yes, I'll admit, it's tough to get too excited about that given that we've known that these higher performance Comet Lake chips were coming for some time. Thanks to several impressively accurate leaks, some in the past few days, we've already told you everything about the new Intel gaming laptop chips, everything that has finally been made official today. 

The crux of the matter is that this is another outing for Intel's ageing 14nm++ production process, which means that there isn't the level of innovation on show that you might find from a new architecture. Say, from a new AMD Ryzen Mobile chip. What you do get, however, is an existing process that can be pushed to the limit. In this case, we're talking about pushing the frequency as hard as it will go.

(Image credit: Intel)

The headline figure here comes from the top of the range CPU, the 8-core/16-thread Core i9 10980HK, which claims a top operating frequency of 5.3GHz. It isn't alone though, there are six chips being launched and four of them have a single-core turbo of 5GHz or above. 

That's technically impressive, but also really good for us PC gamers. While we're slowly moving to a world where more cores are being utilized by game engines, the fact of the matter is that there are plenty of applications, and indeed games, where frequency is the driving factor much more than the number of cores is. 

There are a few other things that come with the new chips that are worth getting excited about too, including support for Wi-Fi 6 and Thunderbolt 3. Improved Wi-Fi is always a good thing, and there are plenty of positives when it comes to the new Wi-Fi 6 standard

The benefits of Thunderbolt 3 are slightly less obvious at first glance, which has mainly been used by those accursed Apple machines, but with support for connections up to 3,000MB/s, and a growing number of supported devices, Thunderbolt 3 is certainly welcome, especially on laptops that potentially enable you to easily hook your machine up to two 4K displays. 

(Image credit: Intel)

There's an important thing to consider in all of this though, and as we highlighted when we first heard about the Core i9 10980HK, it's all well and good having a potential max turbo that high, but if the thermals of your laptop of choice can't maintain such speeds for any length of time, then it's a figure that holds little weight. 

The point being, we'll need to see how all these chips perform in actual laptops before we get too excited. 

This is Intel, so we'll be spoiled for choice when it comes to seeing how these new chips will be used, and at what price points, but it does look like Intel is responding to the threat from AMD's Ryzen 9 4000-series with predictable bullishness. 

Alan Dexter

Alan has been writing about PC tech since before 3D graphics cards existed, and still vividly recalls having to fight with MS-DOS just to get games to load. He fondly remembers the killer combo of a Matrox Millenium and 3dfx Voodoo, and seeing Lara Croft in 3D for the first time. He's very glad hardware has advanced as much as it has though, and is particularly happy when putting the latest M.2 NVMe SSDs, AMD processors, and laptops through their paces. He has a long-lasting Magic: The Gathering obsession but limits this to MTG Arena these days.

Latest in Processors
A close-up stylized photo of a silicon wafer, showing many small processor dies
Intel is still using TSMC for 30% of its wafer demands: 'We were talking about trying to get that to zero as quickly as possible. That's no longer the strategy'
Monster Hunter Wilds screen
Monster Hunter Wilds: Turns out updating drivers fixes brand new game. Again
Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite logo on a Samsung laptop
Next-gen Snapdragon X2 chip rumoured to pack 18 cores and a new CPU architecture, but we're still waiting for gaming to really be a goer on the original Snapdragon X
A close-up stylized photo of a silicon wafer, showing many small processor dies
Broadcom and Nvidia are claimed to be testing manufacturing on Intel's 18A process node, and even AMD is reportedly interested
Nvidia Thor SoC for automotive
Nvidia's long-awaited Arm-based chip for PCs reportedly spotted running Geekbench very badly
A photo of a Ryzen 9 9900X processor against a teal background with a white border
AMD's 12-core Ryzen 9 9900X is the cheapest it's ever been, apart from yesterday, when it was four cents cheaper
Latest in News
Atomfall screenshot
Rebellion CEO puts the studio's recent avoidance of layoffs down to control of scope and cost: 'Sometimes we say, guys, this game's too big'
Pixel-art portraits of Astarion and Shadowheart against a seasonal backdrop of Stardew Valley
The Baldur's Gate 3 mod for Stardew Valley is out, so here's another opportunity to romance Astarion
Doom: The Dark Ages art
'I think only the shotguns are the same,' says Doom: The Dark Ages director, otherwise the guns are brand-new or significantly transformed
Fortnite jacked Peter Griffin
Parents are suing Epic over Fortnite item shop 'FOMO' timers they say are inaccurate and manipulative
zoomed in concept art of the Agadon Hunter, a new enemy appearing in Doom: The Dark Ages.
Doom: The Dark Ages already sneakily revealed its 'new Marauder,' and the devs hope he'll be just as challenging, but a little less frustrating
Doom: The Dark Ages art
The sickest gun from Doom: The Dark Ages' trailer is called the 'Skullcrusher' and does such horrible things to demons, the game's lead dev boasts id has 'the best gore in the industry'