CPU Comparison

Apple M1 vs Intel Core i3-1120G4

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.

Top pick
Apple · Apple M series
Apple M1
8C / 8T
8.8
Full review
Intel · Core i3
Intel Core i3-1120G4
4C / 8T3.5 GHz15 W
5
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Apple
Intel
Market
Consumer / Prosumer Laptops and Desktops
Mobile
Segment
Mobile / Desktop SoC (entry–mid-range Mac)
Mobile
Generation
1st Gen Apple Silicon (M1 family)
11th Generation
Launched
2020
2020
Status
Discontinued in new Macs (replaced by M2/M3; M1 Macs largely off new market by early 2024)
Active
Codename
Firestorm (performance) + Icestorm (efficiency)
Tiger Lake-U
Series
Apple M series
Core i3
Family
Apple M1
Tiger Lake
Predecessor
Intel Macs (U‑series and Y‑series CPUs)
Intel Core i3-10110Y
Successor
Apple M2 (announced June 2022)

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
8
4
Threads
8
8
Base Clock
1.1 GHz
Boost Clock
3.5 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
8 MB
TDP
15 W
Architecture
Architecture
ARMv8.4-A (Apple Firestorm + Icestorm big.LITTLE-style)
Tiger Lake-U
Process Node
5 nm (TSMC N5)
10nm (SuperFin)
Memory
Memory Type
LPDDR4X
DDR4
Memory Speed
4267 MT/s
DDR4-3733
Memory Channels
Octa (8)
Dual (2)
Max Memory
16 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
On-package (BGA-style, not user-replaceable)
BGA 1598
PCIe Version
PCIe 4.0
PCIe Lanes
16
Integrated GPU
Yes
Yes
Unlocked
No
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Apple M1Best88

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.

Intel Core i3-1120G455

Good for bursty office tasks due to 4 cores, but the 1.1 GHz base clock means it drops to very low performance during sustained workloads.

Gaming

Apple M1Best72

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.

Intel Core i3-1120G420

The Iris Xe G4 graphics can handle light tasks, but the thermally constrained environment prevents sustained GPU frequencies.

Virtualization

Apple M1Best68

Capable for a couple of light VMs, but not ideal for large parallel VM farms due to core count and memory ceiling.

Intel Core i3-1120G435

8 threads are nice on paper, but the thermal limits prevent running VMs effectively for any length of time.

Efficiency

Apple M1Best95

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.

Intel Core i3-1120G490

Extremely efficient at idle and low loads due to the 1.1 GHz base clock, perfect for always-connected devices.

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Apple M1Good for on‑device inference
  • 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
Intel Core i3-1120G4Minimal
  • No dedicated IPU or NPU
  • AVX-512 support present but limited by thermal constraints
  • Not suited for AI workloads

Content Creation

Apple M1Good for light-to-medium workloads
Adobe Premiere Pro (1080p–2K timelines)DaVinci Resolve (HD–2K, basic color grading)Xcode and Swift developmentBlender (small scenes, viewport rendering)Logic Pro and audio production
Intel Core i3-1120G4Minimal
Basic Document EditingLight Web Research

Gaming

Apple M1Good for casual and older titles
  • 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
Intel Core i3-1120G4Poor
  • Thermal constraints prevent sustained GPU performance
  • G4 tier graphics are already limited
  • Not designed or marketed for gaming

Industry Impact

Gaming
Moderate – pushed Windows OEMs to prioritize efficiency and integrated GPU performance in thin laptops, but M1’s gaming impact is limited by macOS software and GPU power.
Negligible
Workstations
High – demonstrated that ARM SoCs could compete with x86 in content creation and pro workloads at lower power, influencing subsequent Apple Silicon Pro/Max and ARM server efforts.
Negligible
Content Creation
High – made 4K video editing and photo editing accessible in thin, quiet laptops, changing expectations for what “ultrabook‑class” devices could do.
Negligible
Virtualization
Moderate – showed efficient VMs on ARM laptops, but x86 server and cloud ecosystems still dominate.
Negligible

Best CPU by Use Case

Web, Office and Study
Excellent
Coding and Development
Very Good
1080p–2K Video Editing
Good
Light 3D and Creative Apps
Good
Multi‑VM / Heavy Server Workloads
Limited
Ultra-Portable Web Browsing
Very Good
Media Consumption
Very Good
Office On-The-Go
Adequate
Light Multitasking
Adequate
Sustained Workloads
Poor

Target Audience

Gamers
Targeted
Content Creators
Targeted
Developers
Targeted
Workstation Users
Streamers
Targeted
Office / Productivity
Targeted
Targeted
Students
Targeted
Targeted

Strengths & Weaknesses

Apple M1

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
Intel Core i3-1120G4

Pros

  • 4 cores provide good burst multi-threading
  • 1.1 GHz base enables ultra-thin, fanless designs
  • 16 PCIe 4.0 lanes for fast storage
  • Very high efficiency at low loads
  • 8MB L3 cache is generous for the segment

Cons

  • 1.1 GHz base clock causes severe performance drops under sustained load
  • BGA 1598 socket limits motherboard and upgrade options
  • No LPDDR4X support limits memory bandwidth
  • 3.5 GHz boost is the lowest among 4-core Tiger Lake parts
  • Lacks IPU 6.0 found on other similar-tier parts

Competitors & Alternatives

Apple M1

Intel Core i3-1120G4

  • AMD Ryzen 3 5300U

    Mobile

    Rival
  • Apple M1

    Mobile

    Rival
    Compare head-to-head
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 8cx Gen 2

    Mobile

    Rival
  • AMD Ryzen 3 3250U

    Mobile

    Rival
  • Intel Pentium Silver N6005

    Mobile

    Rival
  • Standard BGA 1449 socket with much higher clocks and IPU support for a similar core count.

    Compare head-to-head
  • AMD Ryzen 5 5500U
    Alt

    If you can accept a slightly thicker laptop, you get dramatically better sustained performance.

  • Intel Core i5-1130G4
    Alt

    Slightly higher clocks on the same BGA 1598 platform if available.

Our Verdict on Each

Apple M1Recommended

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 review

An unusual 4-core Tiger Lake part severely limited by its 1.1 GHz base clock and BGA 1598 socket, making it a niche OEM component rather than a general-purpose mobile processor.

Best for: Purchasing a premium ultra-thin laptop or tablet where this chip is factory-installed and you value extreme portability over performance.

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Apple M1 or Intel Core i3-1120G4?

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 i3-1120G4?

For gaming, the Apple M1 leads with a gaming performance score of 72/100 among Apple M1 and Intel Core i3-1120G4.

Which uses less power?

The Intel Core i3-1120G4 has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Core i3-1120G4 (15 W).

Do Apple M1 and Intel Core i3-1120G4 use the same socket?

No. They use different sockets (Apple M1: On-package (BGA-style, not user-replaceable), Intel Core i3-1120G4: BGA 1598), 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 i3-1120G4 (4 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). Benchmark figures are approximate and workload-dependent.