Merely two months after putting the Ultra Series 3 Panther Lake chips on the shelves, Intel has finally launched the Core Ultra 200S Plus desktop processors as part of its Arrow Lake refresh lineup. The new Core Ultra 5 250K Plus starts at $199, while the beefier Core Ultra 7 270K Plus trim will set you back by $299. Notably, the price ceiling has been lowered (contrary to rumors), and these processors will be up for grabs starting March 26, 2026.

What’s new on Intel’s Core Ultra 200S Plus processors?

Intel says the Core Ultra 7 270K Plus is its fastest desktop gaming processor ever, something the company attributes to more cores and higher frequency, delivering a big boost to multi-thread performance. As far as gaming goes, the company is applying a new Intel Binary Optimization Tool that is claimed to deliver better native game performance.

Under the hood, it offers eight performance cores and 16 efficiency cores (four more than its predecessor), while the peak frequency reaches 5.5 GHz. Additionally, the 900MHz frequency boost is touted to increase the “speed of the CPU/memory controller link by nearly one gigahertz.” Broadly, the company is promising 2x performance compared to rivals (read: AMD Ryzen 7 9700X and AMD Ryzen 5 9600X) and better output per dollar.

On the Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus, you get a total of 18 cores across two clusters — six performance cores and twelve efficiency cores — with a max frequency of 5.3 GHz. This one also benefits from increased die -to-die frequency worth the same magnitude as its more powerful sibling.

How big is the gaming leap on Intel’s Core Ultra 200S Plus processors?

Intel is placing the Core Ultra 7 270K Plus as its best step forward for PC gaming. Benchmark results show over 90% performance gain at multi-core Cinebench and 3DMark CPU across both new Intel processors, while the average gaming peformance has gone up by 15% in games such as “Assassin’s Creed: Shadows,” “Hogwarts Legacy,” and “Hitman 3” on the Core Ultra 7 270K Plus trim.

For the Core Ultra 5 250K Plus, the company is touting an average gain worth 13% in titles such as “Borderlands 3,” “Far Cry 6,” and “F1 2025.” In general, Intel says performance rises by 103% on the Ultra 7, and by over 90% on the Core Ultra 5 trim. Team Blue is also marketing the virtues of its Binary Optimization Tool to enhance the processor instructions per cycle (IPC) and general user performance.

Another notable aspect is the support for the emerging 4-Rank CUDIMM memory, which allows enthusiasts to club the new Intel chips with up to 128GB memory (per module) on the supported Intel 800 Series motherboards. The price cuts, tagging alongside the improved performance, put Intel’s latest in direct competition with AMD’s heavy-hitting Ryzen 5 9600X and Ryzen 7 9700X processors.

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