AMD Ryzen 5 5600H is seen on Geekbench, and it is up to 20 percent faster than the Intel Core i7-10750H.
AMD Ryzen 5 5600H, a 6-core 12-wire processor under the Zen3 microarchitecture was shown running at a Base/Turbo frequency of 3.30/4.20 GHz (originally 3.00/4.10 GHz) and scoring 1372 points in the single-core test and 5713 points in the multi-core test in Geekbench 5.
The AMD Ryzen 5 5600H is seen on Geekbench
As a reference, it is 37 percent faster than its predecessor, the AMD Ryzen 5 4600H (6-core + 12-wire Zen2 @ 3.00/4.00 GHz), in single-core performance, while in multi-core performance the difference is shortened by 18 percent.
If we look for a comparison with its direct rival, the Intel Core i7-10750H (6 cores + 12 threads @ 2.60/5.00 GHz), we see how the new AMD CPU is 20 percent faster in mono-core performance, but in multi-core performance, this great advantage dissipates until it is only 3 percent faster, so when all the cores come into action it seems that this CPU has problems maintaining frequencies and loses the great mono-core advantage. However, in mononucleosis, it is still inferior to Tiger Lake, as it is specifically 14% slower than the Core i7-11370H.