

As for the other two H35 CPUs, we've got the quad-core Intel Core i7-11370H, which will reach a top speed of 4.8GHz, and the quad-core Intel Core i5-11300H, which maxes out at 4.4GHz. That's quite a bit lower than the 35-45W TDP you'll see on the existing Core i7-10750H that powers several of today's best gaming laptops, for example, but Intel still have high hopes for what their trio of H35 chips have to offer when it comes to gaming performance.īuilt with the same 10nm SuperFin technology as the rest of Intel's Tiger Lake family, their flagship H35 chip, the quad-core Core i7-11375H Special Edition, will be able to reach speeds up to 5.0GHz and offer a 15% single thread performance improvement over Intel's 10th Gen H-Series Core i7 chips. As such, the three CPUs announced today during their CES press conference have been specifically designed for ultra thin and light devices rather than your typical gaming laptop, with their TDP range standing at just 28-35W. It's a new laptop segment for Intel, combining the best of their consumer-focused U-Series with the gaming chops of their traditionally beefier H-Series. Instead, Intel are calling these initial three chips their "H-Series Processors for Ultraportable Gaming" family, or H35 CPUs for short. Here's everything you need to know.įirst off, this isn't the full extent of Intel's 11th Gen gaming laptop CPU line-up, as Intel also announced this evening that there will be more powerful H-Series CPUs coming later this year. Comprising of three processors in total, this new trio of high-performance Tiger Lake CPUs will help usher in a new era of even thinner and lighter gaming laptops in 2021, with the first laptop designs coming in at just 16.6mm.

Intel have just announced their first crop of 11th Gen H-series CPUs for gaming laptops.
