CPU Comparison

Intel Xeon 6544P-B vs Intel Xeon 6776P-B

A side-by-side comparison of specs, performance and value. The Intel Xeon 6544P-B is a 32-core, 64-thread server and edge SoC processor from Intel’s Xeon 6 Granite Rapids-D family, built on the Intel 3 process and targeting network, edge, and communications workloads with integrated accelerators, DDR5 memory, and 48 PCIe 5.0 lanes.

Intel · Intel Xeon 6 SoC (Granite Rapids-D)
Intel Xeon 6544P-B
32C / 64T3.3 GHz170 W
8.4
Full review
Intel · Xeon 6700P-B Series
Intel Xeon 6776P-B
72C / 144T3.5 GHz325 W
8.4
Full review

The Bottom Line

Overview & Launch

Brand
Intel
Intel
Market
Server / Edge / Network
Server / Edge / Telecom
Segment
Server / Edge / Network
Server / Edge / Telecom
Generation
6th Gen Intel Xeon Scalable (Granite Rapids-D)
Intel Xeon 6 (Granite Rapids-D)
Launched
2025
2025
Status
Launched
Launched
Codename
Granite Rapids-D
Granite Rapids-D
Series
Intel Xeon 6 SoC (Granite Rapids-D)
Xeon 6700P-B Series
Family
Intel Xeon 6 Processors
Intel Xeon 6 Processors
Predecessor
Intel Xeon D-28xx / D-15xx series
Intel Xeon D-2899NT (Ice Lake-D)

Specifications Compared

Cores & Clocks
Cores
32
72
Threads
64
144
Base Clock
2 GHz
2.3 GHz
Boost Clock
3.3 GHz
3.5 GHz
Cache & Power
L3 Cache
128 MB
288 MB
L2 Cache
0 MB
TDP
170 W
325 W
Architecture
Architecture
Granite Rapids-D (Redwood Cove P-cores)
Granite Rapids-D (P-core only, Intel Xeon 6 with P-cores)
Process Node
Intel 3
Intel 3 (7 nm equivalent)
Memory
Memory Type
DDR5
DDR5
Memory Speed
5600 MT/s
DDR5-6400
Memory Channels
Quad (4)
Octa (8)
Max Memory
1130 GB
2250 GB
Platform & I/O
Socket
LGA4710 / FCBGA4368
FCBGA5026
PCIe Version
PCIe 5.0 / 4.0
PCIe 5.0 / PCIe 4.0
PCIe Lanes
48
48
Integrated GPU
None
None
Unlocked
No
No

Performance Compared

Productivity

Intel Xeon 6544P-B0
Intel Xeon 6776P-BBest88

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6544P-B0
Intel Xeon 6776P-BBest20

Virtualization

Intel Xeon 6544P-B0
Intel Xeon 6776P-BBest90

Efficiency

Intel Xeon 6544P-B0
Intel Xeon 6776P-BBest68

Specialized Performance

AI / ML

Intel Xeon 6544P-BGood for edge inference
  • AMX and DL Boost accelerate CPU-based inference
  • Suitable for small to medium LLM serving and vision models at the edge
  • No GPU-style high-throughput training
Intel Xeon 6776P-BVery Good (for CPU-based edge AI)
  • Intel AMX for BF16/INT8 matrix operations
  • DL Boost for AVX-512-based inference
  • No integrated GPU-like AI accelerator, but strong CPU-based AI for edge

Content Creation

Intel Xeon 6544P-BLimited
FFmpeg / media transcoding (via integrated Media Transcode Accelerator)Background rendering in edge pipelines
Intel Xeon 6776P-BLimited
Server-side video transcoding (where QAT is used)Batch media processingServer-side rendering for cloud game streaming

Gaming

Intel Xeon 6544P-BNot applicable
  • No integrated graphics
  • Server-focused SoC not validated for gaming
  • Gaming not a target use case
Intel Xeon 6776P-BNot applicable
  • No integrated graphics and server-focused clocks
  • Not validated for client or gaming use cases
  • Single-threaded performance optimized for server workloads

Industry Impact

Gaming
None
None
Workstations
Low
Low
Content Creation
Moderate (mainly via edge media transcoding)
Low
Virtualization
High (for lightweight edge and NFV workloads)
High

Best CPU by Use Case

5G vRAN and Open RAN
Excellent
Edge AI inference and LLM serving
Very Good
Live media transcoding and CDN edge caching
Excellent
Secure network appliance (firewall, VPN, IDPS)
Excellent
Compact single-socket edge server
Excellent
5G vRAN / RAN Infrastructure
Excellent
Edge Servers and Converged Edge/Core
Excellent
Network and Security Appliances
Excellent
Virtualized Telco Workloads (NFV, SDN)
Very Good
Dense General-Purpose Compute at the Edge
Good

Target Audience

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

Strengths & Weaknesses

Intel Xeon 6544P-B

Pros

  • 32 high-performance Redwood Cove P-cores with strong per-thread throughput
  • Integrated QAT, DLB, DSA, and media transcode accelerators for vRAN and media
  • 48 PCIe 5.0/4.0 lanes for high-speed NICs and accelerators
  • Quad-channel DDR5-5600 with ECC and up to 1.13 TB capacity
  • Single-socket SoC design reduces platform complexity for edge systems

Cons

  • No dual-socket support; limited to 1S platforms
  • No integrated graphics; GPU or display outputs require a discrete card
  • 170 W TDP can still be challenging in tightly sealed edge enclosures
  • L2 cache and per-core cache breakdown not fully documented by Intel
  • New platform with limited independent benchmark data
Intel Xeon 6776P-B

Pros

  • 72 P-cores / 144 threads for high throughput
  • 8-channel DDR5-6400 with up to 2.25 TB memory
  • Integrated vRAN Boost, AMX, QAT, DLB, DSA for telco and networking
  • 48 PCIe lanes (Gen5 + Gen4) from CPU
  • Single-socket BGA5026 simplifies board design for edge appliances
  • Strong SPEC CPU2017 & SPECpower results for its class

Cons

  • High 325 W TDP requires robust cooling and power design
  • Single-socket only; no dual-socket scale-out
  • BGA socket is not field-upgradable
  • Newer AMD EPYC 8005 series can offer better performance per watt and per dollar in some edge benchmarks
  • Limited relevance for client, gaming, or traditional workstation use

Competitors & Alternatives

Intel Xeon 6544P-B

  • AMD EPYC 7543 (32-core Milan)

    Server / General Purpose

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 9355P (32-core Turin)

    Server / AI / HPC

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6543P-B

    Server / Edge

    Rival
    Compare head-to-head
  • Intel Xeon 6706P-B

    Server / Edge

    Rival
    Compare head-to-head
  • Intel Xeon Gold 6526Y (Emerald Rapids)

    Server / General Purpose

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 7543
    Alt

    32-core Milan alternative with 256 MB L3 and 8-channel DDR4, offering higher memory bandwidth and cache for workloads that can leverage it, at higher platform power.

  • AMD EPYC 9355P
    Alt

    32-core Turin processor with higher clocks and modern DDR5/PCIe 5, suitable if you want a modern AMD-based alternative with strong AI performance.

  • Intel Xeon Gold 6526Y
    Alt

    Mainstream server CPU with similar core count but different feature set; useful if you don’t need the SoC-style accelerators and want a more traditional platform.

Intel Xeon 6776P-B

  • AMD EPYC 8635P (84-core, Zen 5)

    Edge / Telecom

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 8534P (64-core, Zen 4)

    Edge / Telecom

    Rival
  • NVIDIA Grace CPU Superchip (Neoverse N2, 72+72 cores)

    Edge / Cloud

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6774P (64-core, Granite Rapids-SP, LGA4710)

    General Server

    Rival
  • Intel Xeon 6787P (86-core, Granite Rapids-SP, LGA4710)

    General Server

    Rival
  • AMD EPYC 8635P
    Alt

    Higher core count (84 vs 72), lower TDP (225 W), and better performance per watt and per dollar in some SPEC benchmarks; strong alternative for vRAN and edge.

  • Intel Xeon 6776P (LGA4710)
    Alt

    Same core count and similar clocks but in an LGA socket for dual-socket servers; choose if you need 2S configurations or standard board upgradeability.

  • Intel Xeon 6768P-B (64-core, Granite Rapids-D)
    Alt

    Lower core count and slightly lower TDP in the same BGA5026 platform; better fit when 72 cores are overkill.

  • Intel Xeon 6774P (LGA4710)
    Alt

    64-core Granite Rapids-SP part with higher all-core turbo and 2S support; good if you prefer a socketed platform and can accept fewer cores.

  • NVIDIA Grace CPU Superchip
    Alt

    Non-x86 but very high core count and memory bandwidth; attractive for greenfield edge/AI stacks that can adopt Arm software.

Our Verdict on Each

A highly integrated edge and network SoC with strong per-core performance, built-in accelerators, and modern I/O, though its value depends heavily on how much you exploit its specialized features rather than raw core count alone.

Best for: Building a single-socket edge or network appliance where you can exploit the integrated accelerators and high PCIe lane count, such as vRAN, secure gateways, or media edge servers.

Read the full review

A powerful, highly integrated edge SoC with strong multi-threaded throughput and purpose-built accelerators for telco and networking, but its high TDP and single-socket focus limit deployment flexibility compared to newer or more efficient alternatives.

Best for: Building single-socket edge servers for 5G vRAN, RAN, or network appliances where you want Intel x86 with integrated accelerators and high core density.

Read the full review

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is faster for gaming, Intel Xeon 6544P-B or Intel Xeon 6776P-B?

For gaming, the Intel Xeon 6776P-B leads with a gaming performance score of 20/100 among Intel Xeon 6544P-B and Intel Xeon 6776P-B.

Which uses less power?

The Intel Xeon 6544P-B has the lowest rated TDP. Power draw across these chips: Intel Xeon 6544P-B (170 W), Intel Xeon 6776P-B (325 W).

Do Intel Xeon 6544P-B and Intel Xeon 6776P-B use the same socket?

No. They use different sockets (Intel Xeon 6544P-B: LGA4710 / FCBGA4368, Intel Xeon 6776P-B: FCBGA5026), so each needs a compatible motherboard.

Which has more cores?

The Intel Xeon 6776P-B has the most cores. Core counts: Intel Xeon 6544P-B (32 cores), Intel Xeon 6776P-B (72 cores).