Intel likes 5.0 GHz processors. The one area where it claims a clear advantage over AMD is in its ability to drive the frequency of its popular 14nm process. Earlier this week, we reviewed the Core i9-9990XE, which is a rare auction only CPU but with 14 cores at 5.0 GHz, built for the high-end desktop and high frequency trading market. Today we are looking at its smaller sibling, the Core i9-9900KS, built in numbers for the consumer market: eight cores at 5.0 GHz. But you’ll have to be quick, as Intel isn’t keeping this one around forever.

The Battle of the Bits

Every time a new processor comes to market, several questions get asked: how many cores, how fast, how much power? We’ve come through generations of promises of many GHz and many cores for little power, but right now we have an intense battle on our hands. The red team is taking advantage of a paradigm shift in computing with an advanced process node to offer many cores at a high power efficiency as well as at a good frequency. In the other corner is team blue, which has just equipped its arsenal by taking advantage of its most aggressive binning of 14nm yet, with the highest frequency processor for the consumer market, enabled across all eight cores and to hell with the power. Intel’s argument here is fairly simple:

Do you want good all-around, or do you want the one with the fastest raw speed?

The Intel Core i9-9900KS is borne from the battle. In essence it looks like an overclocked Core i9-9900K, however by that logic everything is an overclocked version of something else. In order for Intel to give a piece of silicon off the manufacturing like the name of a Core i9-9900KS rather than a Core i9-9900K requires additional binning and validation, to the extent where it has taken several months from announcement just for Intel to be happy that they have enough chips for demand that will meet the warranty standards.

At the time Intel launched its 9th Generation Core desktop processors, like the Core i9-9900K, I perhaps would not have expected them to launch something like the Core i9-9900KS. It’s a big step up in the binning, and I’d be surprised if Intel gets one chip per wafer that hits this designation. Intel announced the Core i9-9900KS after AMD had launched its Zen 2 Ryzen 3000 family, offering 12 cores with an all core turbo around 4.2 GHz and a +10% IPC advantage over Intel’s Skylake microarchitecture (and derivatives) for a lower price per core. In essence, Intel’s Core i9-9900K consumer flagship processor had a chip that was pretty close to it in performance with several more cores.

Intel is pushing the Core i9-9900KS as the ultimate consumer processor. With eight cores all running at 5.0 GHz, it is promising fast response and clock rates without any slowdown. Intel has many marketing arguments as to why the KS is the best processor on the market, especially when it comes to gaming: having a 5.0 GHz frequency keeps it top of the pile for gaming where frequency matters (low resolution), and many games don’t scale beyond four cores, let alone eight, and so the extra cores on the competition don’t really help here. It will be interesting to see where the 9900KS comes out in standard workload tests however, where cores can matter.

Intel’s 9th Generation Core Processors

The Intel Core i9-9900KS now sits atop of Intel’s consumer product portfolio. The processor is the same 8-core die as the 9900K, unlocked with UHD 620 integrated graphics, but has a turbo of 5.0 GHz. All cores can turbo to 5.0 GHz. The length of the turbo will be motherboard dependent, however.

Intel 9th Gen Core 8-Core Desktop CPUs
AnandTech Cores Base
Freq
All-Core Turbo Single
Core Turbo
Freq
IGP DDR4 TDP Price
(1ku)
i9-9900KS 8 / 16 4.0 GHz 5.0 GHz 5.0 GHz UHD 630 2666 127 W $513
i9-9900K 8 / 16 3.6 GHz 4.7 GHz 5.0 GHz UHD 630 2666 95 W $488
i9-9900KF 8 / 16 3.6 GHz 4.7 GHz 5.0 GHz - 2666 95 W $488
i7-9700K 8 / 8 3.6 GHz 4.6 GHz 4.9 GHz UHD 630 2666 95 W $374
i7-9700KF 8 / 8 3.6 GHz 4.6 GHz 4.9 GHz - 2666 95 W $374

The Core i9-9900KS has an tray price of $513 (when purchased in 1000 unit bulk), which means we’re likely to see an on-shelf price of $529-$549, depending on if it gets packaged in its dodecanal box that our review sample came in.

Compared to the Core i9-9900K or Core i9-9900KF, the Core i9-9900KS extends its 5.0 GHz all through from when 2 cores are active to 8 cores are active. There is still no Turbo Boost Max 3.0 here, which means that all cores are guaranteed to hit this 5.0 GHz number. The TDP is 127 W, which is the maximum power consumption of the processor at its base frequency, 4.0 GHz. Above 4.0 GHz Intel does not state what sort of power to expect. We have this testing further in the review.

Competition

At present, Intel is competing against two major angles with the Core i9-9900KS. On the one side, it already has the Core i9-9900K, which if a user gets a good enough sample, can be overclocked to emulate the 9900KS. Intel does not offer warranty on an overclocked CPU, so there is something to be taken into account – the warranty on the Core i9-9900KS is only a limited 1 year warranty, rather than the standard 3 years it offers to the majority of its other parts, which perhaps indicates the lengths it went to for binning these processors.

From AMD, the current 12-core Ryzen 9 3900X that is already in the market has become a popular processor for users going onto 7nm and PCIe 4.0. It offers more PCIe lanes from the CPU to take advantage of PCIe storage and such, and there are a wealth of motherboards on the market that can take advantage of this processor. It also has an MSRP around the same price, at $499, although is often being sold for much higher due to availability.

AMD also has the 16-core Ryzen 9 3950X coming around the corner, promising slightly more performance than the 3900X, and aside from the $749 MSRP, it’s going to be an unknown on availability until it gets released in November.

The Competition
Intel i9-9900KS Intel i9-9900K Anand
Tech
AMD
2920X
AMD
3950X
AMD
3900X
AMD
3800X
8 8 Cores 12 16 12 8
16 16 Threads 24 32 24 16
4.0 3.6 Base 3.5 3.5 3.8 3.9
8 x 5.0 2 x 5.0 Turbo 4.3 4.7 4.6 4.5
2 x 2666 2 x 2666 DDR4 4 x 2933 2 x 3200 2 x 3200 2 x 3200
3.0 x16 3.0 x16 PCIe 3.0 x64 4.0 x24 4.0 x24 4.0 x24
127 W 95 W TDP 180 W 105 W 105 W 105 W
$513 $486 Price $649 $749 $499 $399

It’s worth noting here that while Intel has committed to delivering ‘10nm class’ processors on the desktop in the future, it currently has made zero mention of exactly when this is going to happen. Offering a limited edition all-core 5.0 GHz part like the Core i9-9900KS into the market is a brave thing indeed – it will have to provide something similar or better when it gets around to producing 10nm processors for this market. We saw this once before, when Intel launched Devil’s Canyon: super binned parts that ultimately ended up being faster than those that followed on an optimized process, because the binning aspect ended up being a large factor. Intel either has extreme confidence in its 10nm process for the desktop family, or doesn’t know what to expect.

This Review

In our review, we’re going to cover the usual benchmarking scenarios for a processor like this, as well as examine Intel’s relationship with turbo and how much a motherboard manufacturer can affect the performance.

Test Bed and Setup
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  • AshlayW - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    'Hater's dislike this CPU because once again Intel is relying on marketing ploys and borderline mis-information to sell recycled parts based on tech from 2015, at a price that is higher than the competition's part with 4 more cores, signficnatly higher MT perf, higher efficiency, an included cooler, it's not EOL like Z390, etc. Do you see what I'm saying? these 'haters' are sick and tired of Intel's stranglehold on price-gauging the CPU market and they voice their opinions now that we have some really viable competition. Shocker: people care about value and features.
  • nathanddrews - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    And to some customers, this chip has the features they want at a value level they can afford. I'm not sure why that's so difficult a concept to understand. Rather, I think that the "haters" understand perfectly well, they irrationally fear what other people purchase.
  • Spunjji - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    None of what you said discounts what he said - it's just whataboutism followed by some unflattering generalisations about people you think you disagree with. :|
  • GreenReaper - Saturday, November 2, 2019 - link

    It's not fear; it's pity.
  • brantron - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    What does the ring bus clock run at by default? If it's still 3.7 - 4 GHz, these may be a little more overclockable than the turbo clock implies.

    I'm curious how the power and temperature compares to the regular 9900K with everything pushed as far as it will go.

    If and when there's a desktop Comet Lake, I'd also like to see a comparison from Skylake and on. With chiplets, CPU manufacturing processes may no longer completely go out of style, so it would be interesting to see how 14nm progressed over 5 years.
  • Alistair - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    It's kind of funny, that the only thing different about this 9900k is the possible voltage that it might be able to run at, and he didn't test that. "voltage" is nowhere to be found in this review. I.e. this CPU is just a 9900k, nothing improved. Just set your voltage to 1.3V with a normal 9900k and set 5ghz, there, the same. This by all rights will be crushed by the 3950x, I'd rather take double the cores for almost the same money, imo.
  • TEAMSWITCHER - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    "I'd rather take double the cores for almost the same money".

    I jumped on the 9900K long before Zen 2 even had a release date. I'm not disappointed with the performance I get in multi-threaded tasks, certainly not enough to spend $1000 to switch platforms. AMD's 3900X and (eventually) the 3950X might have more cores but it's going to be at least two years before I buy another platform. Instead, I will use that $1000 to purchase an RTX 3080Ti the very instant nvidia puts them up for sale.
  • Korguz - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    heh,.. and you really think nvidia is going to charge 1k for a 3080Ti ??? more like 2000+
  • Alistair - Thursday, October 31, 2019 - link

    um... you could have just kept the 8700k instead if you wanted the ST performance, that hasn't changed
  • TEAMSWITCHER - Friday, November 1, 2019 - link

    What makes you think I had an 8700K? My previous platform was an Intel Core i7 5930K on an X99 Deluxe motherboard. The jump from 6 - 8 cores wasn't huge, but the Coffee Lake cores are faster than the Haswell-E - my Cinebench score still doubled. However, Cinebench is kind of stupid now, and why I dropped the HEDT platform. I'd rather spend more on a GPU, not just for great 4K gaming, but Blender can do faster rendering on a GPU, and you can also use your GPU to accelerate video encoding. 8 cores and 16 threads is plenty for everything else.

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