The leaked information comes from UL’s 3DMark 11 performance database that was posted on Twitter by _rogame (@_rogame). According to the information, the Core i7-1165G7 was able to achieve scores of 11879 on the Physics portion of the benchmark, while its score is rated at 6912. _rogame also listed down the scores of AMD’s Ryzen 7 4800U, which were 11917 and 6121 for physics and graphics, respectively. By comparison, the scores between the two CPUs are more or less on par, with the Core i7-1165G7 actually having gained a little more ground than the competition.

3dmark 11 Performance 11th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-1165G7 @ 2.80GHz4C/8T 2.8GHz base 4.4GHz boost Physics score : 11879 (99.68%)Graphics score : 6912 (112.92%) For context R7 4800U gets : Physics score : 11917Graphics score : 6121 pic.twitter.com/01YSfrvndz — _rogame (@_rogame) June 8, 2020 In the same tweet, _rogame also lists specifies that the Core i7-1165G7 will be a 4-cores, 8-threads CPU with a base clock of 2.8GHz and a boost clock of 4.4GHz. As a refresher, that’s half the number of cores and thread on the Ryzen 7 4800U. Moreover, the Zen 2-driven CPU also houses 8 Vega Compute Cores (CUs) running at a clockspeed of 1750MHz. Sadly, the frequency of the alleged Xe graphics is still unknown and unlisted. To be fair, 3DMark 11 is already a decade old, and as such, it isn’t the most demanding benchmark by today’s standard. Further, there’s still no official launch date for Tiger Lake by Intel, neither is there any official details from the semiconductor maker as to when the CPU will be hitting notebooks. As such, take this rumours with a large grain of salt. (Source: _rogame via Twitter, Hot Hardware // Image: Hot Hardware)