The Intel Core 300 "Wildcat Lake" family has been showing up on PassMark fairly regularly over the past few weeks, and now we have a new addition to the list. We have already covered PassMark entries for the Core 5 320 and Core 5 330, and now we're moving up the stack. The Intel Core 7 350, which is the second-fastest SKU in the Wildcat Lake lineup, has just appeared on the benchmarking platform for the first time.
As a quick refresher, Wildcat Lake is Intel's new lineup of affordable, low-power chips designed for entry-level and mid-range notebooks. The Core 7 350 is a 6-core, 6-thread CPU with 2 "Cougar Cove" P-cores and 4 "Darkmont" LPE cores, with P-cores boosting up to 4.8 GHz. It sits just below the Core 7 360 in the hierarchy, sharing identical specifications aside from not supporting Intel's SIPP enterprise validation program.

On PassMark, the Core 7 350 scored 4,228 points in single-threaded performance and 16,237 points in multi-threaded. Those are the best numbers any Wildcat Lake chip has posted on the platform to date. To put that into context, the Apple A19 Pro scores around 5,172 in single-threaded and 14,836 in multi-threaded. That means the Core 7 350 trails the A19 Pro by around 18% in single-core performance, but leads it by approximately 9% in multi-core performance.
We can also compare it against the other Wildcat Lake chips already on PassMark. The Core 5 320 scored 4,104 in single-threaded and 15,346 in multi-threaded, while the Core 5 330 put up similar numbers. The Core 7 350 edges both of them out, which makes sense given the higher clock speeds. Other than that, all three chips are essentially identical in configuration, sharing the same 6-core layout, 6 MB L3 cache, and 15W TDP.
Regardless, it is impressive to see where even the mid-range Wildcat Lake chips are landing against Apple's silicon. If the performance scales properly with higher-end variants, laptops built around these chips could represent a compelling, affordable alternative to the $599 MacBook Neo.
We are already starting to see Wildcat Lake laptops surface from various OEMs, so independent real-world results should not be too far off.





