There is growing evidence that Intel's 13th and 14th Gen Core i9 processors are experiencing serious issues.
We’ve known for months that there’s a serious problem with Intel’s high-end processors, and the company has been trying to fake it for months, blaming users and motherboard manufacturers for it. However, the truth is that the problem is much more serious than we thought until now, and if something isn’t done about it immediately, it could affect sales of next-generation processors as well.
This time, YouTuber Level1Techs has shown new evidence, from logos made by game developers, from two different games.
Of these errors, it turned out that one error, which occurred during a completely general decompression process and caused a malfunction, occurred a total of 1,584 times, of which 1,431 times were the 13900K and 14900K chips operating in the device. In fact, 90 percent of the incidents occurred with these two specific models.
The third-highest number of crashes occurred with the Core i7-9750H, with just 11 crashes, with AMD processors responsible for a total of 4, while 30 percent of the configurations in the database were powered by AMD chips.
For a long time, the Blues blamed the irresponsible solutions of motherboard manufacturers and overloading of chips, but according to the video, more and more data centers are reporting the bug, but there are no gaming motherboards designed for tuning, but stability – W680 motherboards are focused on machines. And although these chips cost much more, the only solution now is to turn off the efficiency centers, which means that their operation costs a lot. Similar crashes occur on game servers, and some developers fear that they will lose players as a result.
If Intel doesn’t fix the issue soon, it could impact sales of the next-generation Arrow Lake processors as well. And since AMD could be a serious competitor to Zen 5, it could cost the Blues millions of dollars.