Multicore performance when measured with Cinebench R23 over a sustained 10 minute test saw the Core i9-14900KF land a score of 35,569 points, putting it very close to the AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D from our comparison data. While this performance is impressive, it fell some way short of the previously tested Intel Core i9-14900K, due to the 14900KF's lower power limit.
Switching things up to test single core performance saw that gap between the two 14th Intel processors narrow significantly. The 14900KF found in the Project Zero Infinity desktop recorded a score of 2,234 points, putting it within touching distance of the both the AMD Ryzen 7 9700X and the Intel Core i9-14900K.
Pitting this CyberPowerPC system against a range of previously reviewed prebuilt desktop PCs in 3DMark Time Spy saw it take a substantial lead and top the chart. CPU scores were recorded at 22,395 points, which obliterates anything I have tested in the past. GPU performance tells a similar story, with the MSI RTX 4080 Super Suprim X scoring 28,799 points.
The Kingston Renegade RGB DDR5 6400MT/s memory found in the system recorded some very fast read and write speeds when testing with AIDA64. While not as beneficial to Intel as it would be to an AMD based system, this result still highlights the benefits to be found in running faster system memory.
Finally, the PCMark 10 scores highlight the systems overall performance across a variety of differing scenarios. As is the usual with this test, the content creation category is a particular highlight at 19,384 points, thanks to the RTX 4080 Super graphics card found inside the system.