APC Australia

Intel Core i5-12600K

It’s a stunner.

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The 12600K offers a rather stunning level of performanc­e for its price. It manages to beat out the 5800X in most cases, despite ostensibly being a six core CPU.

The Core i5-12600K is the real hero of the 12th Gen range. It’s an amazing all-round CPU. Chris Szewczyk

Specificat­ions

Intel Core i5-12600K; LGA 1700 socket; 6 P-Cores + 4 E-Cores, 16 threads; P-core Base/Max Clock Speed 3.7/4.9 GHz, Single E-core Base/Max Clock speed 2.8/3.6 GHz; 20MB Cache; 125W Base Power, 150W Maximum Turbo Power.

The i9-12900K is the CPU that’s tending to grab the headlines, but the real hero of the 12th Gen range may well be the Core i5-12600K. The 12600K contains six performanc­e cores and four efficiency cores for a total of 16 threads. It definitely sits in the sweet spot for value and performanc­e. Its high clocks should see it get close enough to the 12700K and 12900K, particular­ly with single threaded workloads and it should turn out to be a capable gaming CPU. And, it adds welcome power efficiency to the mix too.

As expected, you lose a little bit of boost clock vs the high-end CPUs but, interestin­gly, the base clocks of the 12600K are higher than those of the i9 and i7 CPUs. The six P-cores can boost up to 4.9 GHz while the four E-cores can boost to 3.6. The 12600K contains 20MB of L3 cache, and much like the 12900K, there’s Intel UHD770 graphics and you have the choice of either DDR5 or DDR4 memory support, so by selecting a matching Z690 board, you can save a lot of money by sticking with your current DDR4 memory.

The 12600K offers a rather stunning level of performanc­e for its price. It manages to beat out the 5800X in most cases, despite ostensibly being a six core CPU. The E-cores really do add a lot of performanc­e. All other six core CPUs are left in the dust. The 12600K’s single threaded and gaming performanc­e elevates it ahead of everything except its higher priced 12th Gen siblings, though as we noted in our 12900K review, we feel there’s room for improvemen­t. Windows 11 and the x86 hybrid architectu­re are brand new, and with many years of software developmen­t to come, there could be some interestin­g performanc­e surprises ahead.

The 12600K features a maximum turbo power limit of 150W, far below the 241W of the 12900K. With 16 threads at 150W, it’s perfectly acceptable for a high-performanc­e system. It’s an example of how Intel CPUs are often unfairly labelled as power guzzlers. In our testing, the 12600K is only a few watts ahead of the 5800X while matching or beating it in performanc­e – sometimes by quite a lot. This means you don’t need a high-end cooler and in fact even a decent mid-range cooler will be enough as long as you’re not thrashing out heavy rendering loads all day.

The 12600K is the superstar of the 12th Generation range. It’s a great example of how the Alder Lake architectu­re can be tuned for efficiency. Six P-cores and 12 threads plus another four E-cores for 16 threads in total is bang on the sweet spot for most users, including gamers. And with that, the 12600K becomes our new favourite mainstream CPU. It does it all. It offers amazing gaming performanc­e and performanc­e per watt, and it often beats out the 8-core 11900K and 5800X at multithrea­ding. It adds PCIe 5.0 and DDR5 support for a bit of future proofing too. Then there’s its price. At $599 it offers exceptiona­l performanc­e for your dollar. Welcome back Intel! Now, AMD, it’s over to you.

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