Intel announces Arrow Lake fix coming within a month — Robert Hallock confirms poor gaming performance is due to optimization issues
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Intel identified a number of issues that caused Arrow Lake to exhibit bizarre performance characteristics in some workloads. Hallock revealed that certain combinations of BIOS and OS-level settings created issues that hampered performance.
Responding to a question from Tom's Hardware managing editor Paul Alcorn, Hallock said that Intel hopes to have at least a couple of fixes for Arrow Lake by the end of November — or by early December at the latest.
In one instance, a reviewer recorded memory latency as high as 180ns — over 2x worse than Arrow Lake's expected memory latency of 70 - 80ns.
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Despite this memory latency issue, Hallock confirmed to HotHardware thatArrow Lake's gaming performance regressioncompared to Raptor Lake was not related to memory latency, nor was it caused by Intel's decision to swap to a tile-based architecture. Instead, Arrow Lake's underwhelming gaming performance was caused by tuning and optimization issues.
According to Hallock, Arrow Lake's performance from third-party reviewers did not align with what Intel saw in its internal testing. Hallock noted a massive disconnect between third-party review performance and Intel's internal testing.
Intel is purportedly working on a large internal response to fix these issues. Hallock did not describe in detail the exact issues that are plaguing Arrow Lake's performance scores, but he did say that Intel will undergo a full audit that explains exactly what went wrong with the launch of Arrow Lake and an outline of what the company is going to do to fix it.
That Intel recognizes Arrow Lake's poor launch and massive optimization issues is... encouraging. TheCore Ultra 200Sseries was arguably one of Intel's worst launches in recent memory, with gaming performance coming in as the chip's Achilles' heel.
In ourCore Ultra 9 285K review, the flagship Arrow Lake chip performed worse than theCore i9-14900Kin our 14-game 1080p Geomean — even when using super-fast8200 MHz DDR5 CUDIMMs. Arrow Lake's debut was even more embarrassing compared to the launch ofAMD's Ryzen 7 9800X3D, which performed up to 60% faster than the Core Ultra 9 285K in games.









