Intel Ice Lake processors have surfaced online across the SiSoft Sandra and Geekbench databases. These CPUs are expected to launch later this year, and will bring with them our first glimpse at Intel’s Sunny Cove microarchitecture touting the long-awaited, and much delayed, 10nm process node.

Ice Lake will bring with it the first big changes to the Intel microarchitecture DNA since Skylake, with some seminal changes with roots deeper than that. For the last few years Intel has been wrestling with the 10nm node to get it up to spec, and that’s led to an increased onus on the 14nm process node to deliver with each generation. But no longer.

One such change with Ice Lake will be the drastic increase in EUs within the integrated graphics, confirmed by these SiSoft leaks, from just 24 (or 48 with Iris Plus) with Gen9 to 64 with Gen11. And from the Geekbench leak, within an entry under ‘Dell Inc. Alienware Portable’, Intel looks to be upping the L1 and L2 cache within its Ice Lake chips to 48KB and 512KB, respectively. That’s a touch more than Skylake consumer desktop processors with 256KB of L2 cache a piece.