CPU Comparison
Apple M1 vs Intel Core i3-1000G4
A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Apple M1 is an 8-core ARM-based system-on-a-chip (SoC) that marked Apple’s transition from Intel to its own Apple Silicon for the Mac, combining four high‑performance and four efficiency cores, an 8‑core integrated GPU, and a 16‑core Neural Engine on a 5 nm process.
The Bottom Line
Overview & Launch
Specifications Compared
Performance Compared
Productivity
Very responsive for everyday tasks, Xcode builds, and light creative work; benefits from fast single‑core and SSD, but heavy multi‑thread workloads are constrained by 8 threads.
Basic office tasks run fine, but the 2-core CPU will choke on heavy Excel sheets or multiple browser tabs.
Gaming
Competent for 1080p gaming in macOS and via Rosetta 2 for many titles, but the 8‑core GPU and 8–16 GB memory limit modern AAA performance and resolution scaling.
The 48EU Iris Plus can actually run older e-sports titles like CS:GO or League of Legends at 720p/1080p low, a novelty for a 9W chip.
Virtualization
Capable for a couple of light VMs, but not ideal for large parallel VM farms due to core count and memory ceiling.
Virtually impossible to run useful virtual machines on 2 cores and a 9W power limit.
Efficiency
Outstanding performance per watt; MacBook Air and 13‑inch MacBook Pro with M1 delivered dramatically better battery life and lower heat than comparable Intel Macs.
Outstanding efficiency that allows for all-day battery life in premium ultrabooks.
Specialized Performance
AI / ML
- 16‑core Neural Engine accelerates Core ML models
- CPU and GPU also provide ML accelerators for framework‑level ops
- Not designed for large‑scale training or server‑side inference
- DLBoost provides basic AI acceleration, but the 2-core CPU limits practical applications
Content Creation
Gaming
- 8‑core GPU comparable to low‑end discrete GPUs of its era in some Metal titles
- Rosetta 2 adds overhead for x86 games; some titles have compatibility or performance quirks
- 16 GB memory limit and 8 GPU cores cap texture resolutions and frame rates in modern AAA games
- Can handle older e-sports titles at low settings thanks to the 48EU GPU
- The 2-core CPU will bottleneck heavily in any CPU-intensive game scene
- Not suitable for modern AAA gaming
Industry Impact
Best CPU by Use Case
Target Audience
Strengths & Weaknesses
Pros
- Excellent single‑thread performance and responsiveness
- Outstanding performance per watt and battery life
- Integrated GPU much faster than old Intel UHD/Iris in Macs
- Unified memory simplifies development and improves efficiency
- Silent, fanless operation in MacBook Air and Mac mini under light loads
- Strong on‑device ML inference via Neural Engine
Cons
- Only 8 CPU threads; heavy multi‑thread workloads can hit a ceiling
- Max 16 GB unified memory; not user‑upgradeable
- No eGPU support and limited PCIe expansion
- Rosetta 2 translation layer for some x86 apps; not all software is native
- Newer M2/M3 chips and modern x86 CPUs offer more cores, higher clocks, and better GPU performance
Pros
- 48EU Iris Plus graphics are surprisingly capable for a 9W chip
- True fanless operation is possible, resulting in zero noise
- 10nm process provides excellent idle battery life
- Can drive multiple 4K external displays
- Supports hardware-accelerated video encoding
Cons
- Only 2 CPU cores make modern Windows 11 feel incredibly sluggish
- Base clock of 1.1 GHz is too low for snappy UI responsiveness
- Limited to PCIe 3.0
- Completely obsolete for any modern productivity workflow
- Soldered RAM and CPU mean no upgrade path
Competitors & Alternatives
Apple M1
- Intel Core i7-1165G7Rival
Thin‑and‑Light Laptop
- AMD Ryzen 7 5800URival
Thin‑and‑Light Laptop
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core i5-1135G7Rival
Thin‑and‑Light Laptop
- AMD Ryzen 5 4600HRival
Performance Laptop
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core i7-11800HRival
High‑Performance Laptop
- Alt
Same platform with ~18% faster CPU, 35% faster GPU, and support for up to 24 GB unified memory.
Compare head-to-head - Alt
More CPU/GPU cores and higher memory bandwidth for heavier creative workloads.
Compare head-to-head - AMD Ryzen 7 6800UAlt
Modern x86 laptop CPU with higher multi‑thread performance and DDR5 memory.
Higher core count and better sustained multi‑thread performance in thin laptops.
Compare head-to-head- Alt
Newer architecture with better GPU and CPU performance per watt and improved media engines.
Compare head-to-head
Intel Core i3-1000G4
- AMD Ryzen 3 3200URival
Budget Mobile
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core i3-1000G1Rival
Lower-Tier Ice Lake-Y
- AMD Ryzen 5 3500URival
Mainstream Mobile
- Compare head-to-headIntel Core i5-1035G4Rival
Higher-Tier Ice Lake-U
- Apple A12Z BionicRival
Tablet/ARM
- AMD Ryzen 5 5500UAlt
A modern 6-core Windows laptop CPU that offers vastly superior multitasking.
- Intel N100Alt
For low-power tasks, this modern chip offers 4 efficiency cores and better performance.
A modern 10-core (2P+8E) Alder Lake chip that redefines low-power laptop performance.
Compare head-to-head- Alt
If open to macOS, the efficiency and performance gap is monumental.
Compare head-to-head
Our Verdict on Each
A landmark chip that delivered class‑leading efficiency and single‑thread speed for thin laptops, still very capable for most users but increasingly outdated compared to M2/M3 and modern x86 rivals in multi‑thread and GPU workloads.
Best for: Used or refurbished M1 MacBook Air / Mac mini for general use, study, or light creative work at a low price
Read the full reviewThe i3-1000G4 offered a compelling graphics upgrade over the G1 for ultra-thin Windows devices in 2019, but its 2-core CPU severely limits its usefulness today.
Best for: Consider a laptop with the i3-1000G4 only if it is being given away for free or costs under $50, and you need a disposable machine for basic word processing or playing old 2D games. The 48EU graphics are genuinely capable for legacy gaming, which might appeal to retro gamers looking for a silent, portable machine.
Read the full reviewFrequently Asked Questions
Which is better, Apple M1 or Intel Core i3-1000G4?
Based on our editorial ratings, the Apple M1 comes out ahead with a score of 8.8/10. That said, the best choice depends on your workload — check the spec and performance breakdown above for gaming, productivity and efficiency differences.
Which is faster for gaming, Apple M1 or Intel Core i3-1000G4?
For gaming, the Apple M1 leads with a gaming performance score of 72/100 among Apple M1 and Intel Core i3-1000G4.
Which uses less power?
The Intel Core i3-1000G4 has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Core i3-1000G4 (9 W).
Do Apple M1 and Intel Core i3-1000G4 use the same socket?
No. They use different sockets (Apple M1: On-package (BGA-style, not user-replaceable), Intel Core i3-1000G4: BGA 1377), so each needs a compatible motherboard.
Which has more cores?
The Apple M1 has the most cores. Core counts: Apple M1 (8 cores), Intel Core i3-1000G4 (2 cores).
Which is faster in multi-core benchmarks?
The Apple M1 posts the highest multi-core benchmark score. Multi-core results: Apple M1 (7,404), Intel Core i3-1000G4 (0). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.