Intel appears to be preparing a serious flex with its upcoming Nova Lake CPUs, which are expected to launch in late 2026. New leaks suggest these chips won’t just bring architectural upgrades; they’ll deliver monstrous core counts, massive L3 cache, and pricing that could shake the high-end desktop market.
Nova Lake CPUs go big with cores and cache

Until recently, Intel’s rumored cache plans for Nova Lake topped out at 144 MB of big Last-Level Cache (bLLC). That already dwarfed AMD’s 64 MB 3D V-Cache offerings. But RedGamingTech now claims a dual-bLLC configuration is on the table, doubling that total to 288 MB on select SKUs.
Alongside that, core counts are jumping far past what Arrow Lake offered. The flagship Nova Lake-S chip will reportedly feature:
- 16 P-cores (Coyote Cove)
- 32 E-cores (Arctic Wolf)
- 4 LP E-cores
- 288 MB of bLLC
That’s a 52-core processor with performance gains expected across the board.
Other Nova Lake SKUs also leaked
Intel seems ready to scale this design across the stack not just at the top end. Leaked SKUs include:
- 42-core: 14 P-cores, 24 E-cores, 4 LP E-cores
- 28-core: 8 P-cores, 16 E-cores, 4 LP E-cores
- 24-core: 8 P-cores, 12 E-cores, 4 LP E-cores
These chips may ship with either 144 MB or 288 MB of bLLC, depending on model.
15% IPC boost and high-end pricing
According to RedGamingTech, the Coyote Cove P-cores in Nova Lake offer a 15% IPC uplift over Arrow Lake’s Lion Cove. That kind of gain along with more efficient E-cores and a gigantic cache pool suggests Nova Lake will be a performance monster in both gaming and productivity.
But with great specs comes a steep price. The 52-core flagship with dual-bLLC may launch at over $1,200, more than double the launch price of the Core Ultra 9 285K ($589). Even lower-tier SKUs could be priced higher than expected due to bLLC costs.
Here’s a quick breakdown of what’s rumored:
- Up to 52 cores (16P + 32E + 4 LP E)
- 288 MB bLLC on flagship chips
- 15% IPC gain on P-cores
- Dual-chiplet layout
- Prices potentially $1,200+ for top SKUs
Cache is king, but cost might be too
Intel looks ready to challenge AMD’s 3D V-Cache dominance with sheer volume. Even mid-tier Nova Lake CPUs could offer 144 MB of L3 cache, over twice what AMD includes in the 9800X3D. But whether that translates into real-world dominance and whether buyers accept the rumored price hikes is still an open question.
For now, Nova Lake is shaping up to be a high-risk, high-reward play. If it delivers on performance, those massive specs might justify the eye-watering price tags.

