Intel's Core Ultra 200 laptop CPUs deliver shocking performance gains
Intel's Core 285H chip, the first member of its Core Ultra 200 or "Arrow Lake-H" family for laptops, has a big crater to fill. Yes, crater: This processor essentially bombed on the desktop. In laptops, however, Intel's Core 285H chip helps redeem Intel's reputation, starring in the otherwise pedestrian MSI Prestige 16 AI Evo (B2HMG) laptop. Consider this to be two reviews for the price of one: I'll take a look at the MSI Prestige 16 AI Evo itself, a sample of a laptop that has yet to begin officially shipping. But most of the performance tests I'll run are for the purpose of comparing Intel's Core Ultra 285H and the Arrow Lake-H architecture to the best that AMD and Qualcomm have to offer, plus Intel's older mobile chips. The new Core Ultra 200H chips essentially double the performance in general applications thanks to a ton of additional cores. But, hampered by its lack of a modern NPU, Intel is forced to mumble and kick the ground when it comes to talking about AI. At press time, I couldn't find any retailers that advertised the Prestige 16 AI Evo (B2HMG) for sale, and MSI's own listing for the laptop just references a number of overseas suppliers. MSI charges about 1,620 for the Prestige 16 AI EVO B1MG, which was the debut laptop for our tests of the Core Ultra 100-series chips, or Meteor Lake, in Feb. 2024. Intel sent us an engineering sample of the MSI Prestige 16 AI Evo (B2HMG) for review, as a test bed for the Core Ultra 9 285H (Arrow Lake-H) chip inside.
Feb-10-2025, 14:00:00 GMT