Apple's 18-core M5 Max destroys 96-core Ryzen Threadripper Pro 9995WX in Geekbench — GPU performance is much less impressive

4 hours ago 6
Apple (Image credit: Apple)

Apple's desktop and notebook processors traditionally lead the pack in single-thread workloads, as industry-leading single-thread performance has been the company's focus for a long time. However, Apple's M5 Max processors not only outperform rivals by a huge margin in single-thread workloads, but beat all of them — including the 96-core AMD Ryzen Threadripper Pro 9995WX — in multi-thread workloads in the Geekbench 6 benchmark. However, when it comes to GPU compute performance, not everything is that rosy for the M5 Max.

Single-thread and multi-thread champion

Furthermore, Apple's new flagship CPU beats AMD's 96-core Ryzen Threadripper Pro 9995WX in single-thread (which is not surprising) and multi-thread workloads in Geekbench 6. It should be noted that while most Threadripper Pro 9995WX CPUs score around 26,000 GB6 points in multi-thread workloads, there is one example when this processor hits 30,170 points, which is a bit ahead of M5 Max's 29,644 points.

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Row 0 - Cell 0

M5 Max

M4 Max

M3 Ultra

Threadripper Pro 9995WX

Threadripper Pro 9995WX

Threadripper Pro 7995WX

Ryzen 9 9950X3D

Xeon W9-3595X

Core Ultra 9 285K

General Specification

6SP + 12P at 4.60 GHz

12P at 4.50 GHz + 4E

24P at 4.05 GHz + 8E

96P/192T at 2.50 - 5.40 GHz

96P/192T at 2.50 - 5.40 GHz

96P/192T at 2.50 - 5.10 GHz

16P/32T at 4.30 - 5.70 GHz

60C/120T at 2.0 - 4.80 GHz

8P at 3.70 - 5.70 GHz + 16E

Single-Core

4353

4054

3226

3122

2800

2736

3466

2719

3165

Multi-Core

29644

26320

27551

25992

30170

25899

24057

24206

21014

Source

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/16894743

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12812139

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12809531

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12797289

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12773366

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12802127

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12807125

Row 4 - Cell 8

https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/12813645

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There is a major catch here as the Geekbench 6 multi-thread benchmark is a brief, bursty test intended to mimic common consumer tasks such as archive compression, PDF processing, and image editing. Its short runtime and bursty nature prevent it from fully stressing ultra-high-core-count processors like the Ryzen Threadripper Pro 9995WX.

Furthermore, many of the suite’s multi-threaded subtests scale efficiently only to roughly 8 – 32 threads, which leaves much of such CPUs' parallel capacity idle, but which creates an almost perfect environment for Apple's CPUs that feature a relatively modest number of cores, but which evolve noticeably in terms of per-core performance from one generation to another. Also, keep in mind that Geekbench 6 is a synthetic benchmark that reflects the potential of the tested hardware but may not reflect its performance in real-world applications.

Apple's M5 Max processor in its maximum configuration packs six 'super' performance (SP) cores featuring increased front-end bandwidth (i.e., wider decoder?), enhanced branch prediction, and a new cache hierarchy to deliver unbeatable single-thread performance as well as 12 new performance (P) cores designed to deliver power-efficient multithreaded performance in professional applications, up from 16 cores (12P + 4E cores) offered by the M4 Max. We do not know details about microarchitectures of Apple's 'super' performance and performance cores, though the 12% single-thread performance difference between M5 Max's SP and M4 Max's P cores is evident.

As for the memory subsystem, the M5 Max features up to 128 GB of LPDDR5X-9600 memory connected to the host via a 512-bit interface, offering 614 GB/s of bandwidth, up 12% from M4 Max (546 GB/s). For now, no workstation processor can match the memory bandwidth of M5 Max or M4 Max. Efficient cache and memory subsystems are crucial for single-thread performance, so this part of the M5 Max also played a significant role in its performance boost compared to the predecessor.

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Not quite a GeForce RTX 5090

In addition to its revamped CPU subsystem, Apple's M5 Max also boasts a new GPU that is based on a PowerVR-derived microarchitecture developed by Apple. As it turns out, a big integrated GPU and plenty of memory bandwidth can deliver serious GPU compute oomph: the M5 Max scores 232,718 points on the GeekBench 6 GPU compute benchmark when using the Metal API. Apple's previous-generation M4 Max scores up to 204,453 points in the same tests. Evidently, the new GPU is better than the predecessor, but not that significantly.

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Row 0 - Cell 0

M5 Max

Ryzen AI Max+ 395

GeForce RTX 5070

GeForce RTX 5070 Ti

RTX Pro 6000 WE

GeForce RTX 5090

Score

228,081

133,447

207,061

253,890

368,219

376,858

Background Blur

103,297

70,030

92,405

104,494

63,762

75,075

Background Blur

427.5 images/sec

289.8 images/sec

382.4 images/sec

432.5 images/sec

263.9 images/sec

310.7 images/sec

Face Detection

150,790

45,779

82,638

95,969

60,254

73,968

Face Detection

492.3 images/sec

149.5 images/sec

269.8 images/sec

313.3 images/sec

196.7 images/sec

241.5 images/sec

Horizon Detection

187,002

135,939

261,064

332,704

684,753

637,294

Horizon Detection

5.82 Gpixels/sec

4.23 Gpixels/sec

8.12 Gpixels/sec

10.4 Gpixels/sec

21.3 Gpixels/sec

19.8 Gpixels/sec

Edge Detection

285,273

142,598

302,787

408,073

864,739

838,261

Edge Detection

10.6 Gpixels/sec

5.29 Gpixels/sec

11.2 Gpixels/sec

15.1 Gpixels/sec

32.1 Gpixels/sec

31.1 Gpixels/sec

Gaussian Blur

401,667

161,926

227,152

281,342

832,815

795,994

Gaussian Blur

17.5 Gpixels/sec

7.06 Gpixels/sec

9.9 Gpixels/sec

12.3 Gpixels/sec

36.3 Gpixels/sec

34.7 Gpixels/sec

Feature Matching

59,861

33,663

45,780

47,976

57,199

57,464

Feature Matching

2.36 Gpixels/sec

1.33 Gpixels/sec

1.80 Gpixels/sec

1.89 Gpixels/sec

2.25 Gpixels/sec

2.27 Gpixels/sec

Stereo Matching

694,884

572,700

1,030,792

1,394,629

2,797,728

2,802,350

Stereo Matching

660.6 Gpixels/sec

544,4 Gpixels/sec

979.9 Gpixels/sec

1.33 Tpixels/sec

2.66 Tpixels/sec

2.66 Tpixels/sec

Particle Physics

527,500

518,413

522,239

673,633

1,114,648

1,069,886

Particle Physics

23215.7 FPS

22,815,8 FPS

22984.2 FPS

29647.2 FPS

49056.6 FPS

47086.6 FPS

When compared to non-Apple GPUs, the one inside the M5 Max easily beats the iGPU inside the Ryzen AI Max+ 395, which scores 133,447 points when unconstrained by thermals. When it comes to discrete graphics cards, Apple's flagship iGPU is ahead of Nvidia's GeForce RTX 5070 (207,061 points, Vulkan), but trails the GeForce RTX 5070 Ti (253,890 points, Vulkan) and has no chance against the GeForce RTX 5090. Still, building an integrated GPU that delivers compute performance comparable to one of the best graphics cards is a breakthrough.

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Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.

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