Intel's all-important Panther Lake mobile chip rumoured to launch later this year with just one mode
By Dr. Eleanor Vance | Published on December 05, 2025
Remember we mentioned earlier this week how Intel's upcoming Panther Lake mobile CPU is shaping up to be a killer chip for gaming handhelds? Well, now we have some purported details [[link]] of the first Panther Lake model Intel will release. The good news? It's coming later this year. The bad news? It reportedly won't get the exciting graphics option.
According to a post on X, Intel will launch just one Panther Lake SKU this year. It will sport four P-cores, eight E-cores, zero low-power E-cores and a four-core iGPU.
At least it would be if launched in time to compete with AMD's Strix Point. But if this latest rumour is correct, we'll have to wait until some time in 2026 for the Panther Lake model with 12 graphics cores. Because the variant detailed above with just four graphics cores is said to be the only model launched this year.
There's obviously no official word on why that's the case, if indeed the single-model story is accurate. But there's a good chance it's related to the fact the Panther Lake uses Intel's brand new 18A node for its CPU tile.
It always take time to ramp up production volumes on a new node and the assumption here is that Intel isn't in a position to manufacture enough CPU core tiles on 18A to release a full line up of chips upon immediate release.
Cynical industry observers, meanwhile, might conclude that Intel's 18A node isn't truly ready for volume production. But the company wants to get at least something based on 18A out the door in 2025 in order to keep to its own self-imposed roadmap. Thus, we'll get just the one SKU in 2025.
Whatever the reason, the next question is why it's the SKU detailed and not one with the 12-core graphics and also some low-power E-cores? That may be because Intel prefers to go with the most relevant mainstream SKU at launch and then feed in higher-end models later.
It's thought [[link]] that Intel will be producing the graphics tile on TSMC's N3E node, which is fairly mature at this point and should not itself present any impediment to Panther Lake production. For an iGPU, Panther Lake's graphics are big. But TSMC has been producing much larger chips on N3E than even the most powerful Panther Lake graphics tile for some time now, most obviously the high-end variants of Apple's M4 chip range.
Anywho, it seems it won't be too long now before we get our first taste of Panther Lake and 18A. But we'll probably have to wait a little while before that killer handheld chip arrives, mores the pity.

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