The Arrow Lake refresh rumor says more E-cores and higher memory support, while prices stay put.
Intel
A new report from VideoCardz, citing Board Channels sources, says Intel is preparing a Core Ultra 200K Plus refresh for its Arrow Lake desktop lin…
The Arrow Lake refresh rumor says more E-cores and higher memory support, while prices stay put.
Intel
A new report from VideoCardz, citing Board Channels sources, says Intel is preparing a Core Ultra 200K Plus refresh for its Arrow Lake desktop lineup. The hook? Better specs without a higher price tag.
None of this is official yet, so treat it as a snapshot of what Intel could be planning. Still, if you’re timing a build, the rumored mix of added Efficiency cores, faster rated memory support, and platform continuity is exactly the kind of update that can change when you buy.
The spec bump is aimed at midrange
According to the leak, the biggest changes land in the middle of the stack. The top Core Ultra 9 part looks broadly similar in core layout, while Core Ultra 7 and Core Ultra 5 are where extra E-cores appear.
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That matters most for heavy multitasking and apps that can spread work across lots of threads, like content creation and some productivity loads. But core counts alone do not guarantee a win. The report does not include clocks, power limits, or final boosting behavior, which often decide whether a refresh feels meaningful in everyday use.
The real value may be the platform
If the refresh keeps prices steady, the bigger savings might be in what you do not have to replace. The report says Core Ultra 200K Plus stays on LGA1851 and remains compatible with 800-series motherboards, which can make an upgrade feel more like a drop-in swap than a rebuild.
The same story also points to DDR5-7200 as the rated memory support level. That will be most relevant if you’re buying new RAM anyway. If you already have a stable DDR5 kit, it’s less likely to be the reason you upgrade on its own.
What to watch in 2026
The timing talk centers on early 2026, with a possible CES-season reveal and a first-quarter launch window. Until Intel confirms dates, assume the schedule can shift.
If you can wait, the smart move is to hold for Intel’s official specs and independent benchmarks, because that’s where “more E-cores” either turns into real gains or fades into trivia. If you need a system now, buy what fits your budget today, and keep Core Ultra 200K Plus on your watchlist as a potential value bump.

Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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