Skip to main content

AMD attacks Intel over SYSMark benchmark, but do its own claims hold up?

AMD has gone on the offensive against Intel in a new YouTube video that examines SYSmark, a benchmark commonly used by Intel to describe the performance of its new processors.

In a video titled “Truth or Myth? Is SYSmark a Reliable Benchmark?” AMD’s John Hampton explains that SYSmark relies heavily on raw compute power, and as a result, it tends to favor Intel systems. A test performed in the video shows an Intel system with a Core i5 hitting a SYSmark 2014 score of 987, while an AMD rig hits 659.

Recommended Videos

The video then moves on to PCMark 8, a benchmark AMD believes to be less biased. In that test, the Intel system provides a score of 4,199, while AMD’s rig hits 3,908. AMD then also performs a real-world productivity test using a script that loads office software. In that test the Intel system again beats AMD but by a very slim margin.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

There’s basis for AMD’s complaint. SYSmark is extremely reliant on processor capability, and in 2010 the Federal Trade Commission forced Intel to include a disclaimer whenever it uses the benchmark to boast of performance. The disclaimer states that “software and workloads used in performance tests may have been optimized for performance only on Intel microprocessors.”

It’s certainly true that Intel picks particularly favorable benchmarks when it quotes performance. In addition to SYSmark, the company often uses MobileMark, which can be used to judge battery life. Its results frequently exceed those obtained through other methods of testing, such as the Peacekeeper and web browsing scripts we use at Digital Trends.

But AMD’s complaint feels like the pot calling the kettle black, as its own comparisons have similar flaws. The company says it uses “PCMark 8 accelerated,” which references the GPU-accelerated versions of the software, and a disclaimer at the end of the video shows that AMD compared an HP laptop that was paired with an AMD processor and Radeon R7 GPU to an HP system with Intel HD 5500 graphics (which is not the latest hardware from Intel).

The PCMark 8 test lists the $650 HP Envy m6-p013dx as the AMD system tested, while the HP 15-r210dx is listed as representing Intel. That model of the HP 15 is no longer widely available, but when it was in production, it went for $530. HP does not sell a price-comparable Intel notebook with discrete graphics, but Acer, Asus, and Dell build notebooks with an Intel Core i5 and Nvidia discrete graphics for as little as $500.

Different systems were used for AMD’s custom productivity test, too. For that, its own products were represented by an HP Elitebook 745 G3 with a Radeon R7 discrete GPU, while the Intel system was an HP ProBook G2 with HD 5500 graphics.

I can’t say how each was priced, because neither is broadly available in North America.

It seems AMD’s attempt to discredit Intel uses tactics very similar to those it slams Intel for. The company has cherry-picked systems and benchmarks to create a scenario that paints AMD hardware in a favorable light. Nothing in the video is technically incorrect, but whether it’s a representation of the “real world,” as the video claims, is up for debate.

Matthew S. Smith
Matthew S. Smith is the former Lead Editor, Reviews at Digital Trends. He previously guided the Products Team, which dives…
AMD’s Ryzen 7 9800X3D may not give Intel any breathing room
The Ryzen 7 7800X3D installed in a motherboard.

The competition between Intel Arrow Lake and AMD Zen 5 hasn't been as fierce as usual, with both lineups delivering small gen-to-gen improvements. However, it seems that AMD may soon add a staple to its list of the best processors, and the CPU might be announced at the worst possible time for Intel. I'm talking about the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, which now has a rumored release date alongside some performance benchmarks.

The release date speculation was initially shared on Bilibili, but the user has since deleted their post. However, the discussion continued on Chiphell forums, spilling the beans on both the official announcement date and the possible release date.

Read more
Do CPUs require drivers?
AMD Rizen CPU 3 next to box

Your CPU is an important component in your PC, so like graphics cards, it should probably have its own CPU drivers, right? Not in this case. While there are drivers that are called chipset drivers, and technically there is microcode that runs on the chips themselves, processors of any budget can be installed without drivers.

There are plenty of drivers you should keep on top of, but the processor is not one of them.
Do CPUs have drivers?

Read more
More than seven months later, Intel CPU instability issue might be over
Intel's 14900K CPU socketed in a motherboard.

We first reported on the Intel CPU instability issue in February 2024, and since then, Intel has offered various fixes that helped, but still failed to fix the problem once and for all. Now, it finally seems like the owners of Intel's best CPUs might soon be able to rest easy. Intel has shared a new update that pinpoints the four causes of Raptor Lake problems and provides a fix.

Intel's July update on the matter disclosed that the company was aware of issues within the microcode and that the problem was related to incorrect voltages. Today's update breaks this down into four operating scenarios that can cause problems. Intel now refers to these long-lasting issues as the "Vmin Shift Instability."

Read more