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Intel reportedly no longer working on 6-core Nova Lake mobile SKU, alleges new rumor — Wildcat Lake Refresh to become focus for next-gen budget markets instead

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Why This Matters

The decision to cancel the 6-core Nova Lake mobile SKU highlights Intel's strategic focus on avoiding product overlap and cannibalization within its budget segment. It underscores the company's emphasis on optimizing its product lineup to meet market demand more effectively, especially as competitors like Apple introduce new devices. This shift impacts consumers by streamlining options and potentially improving product differentiation in the budget laptop market.

Key Takeaways

Following Panther Lake, Intel's upcoming Nova Lake family is set to be a true next-gen leap as well. While Panther Lake is mobile-only, Nova Lake is desktop-first but also has mobile parts, just like the current Arrow Lake (refresh) lineup. Prior leaks have indicated that NVL scales from 6 cores all the way up to 52 cores at the top-end, but a new rumor from tipster Jaykihn says the 6-core mobile SKU has been shelved.

Nova Lake 6C mobile is cancelled.June 2, 2026

As you'd expect, the 6-core part in question would've been the lowest-end offering from Nova Lake, targeted entirely at the budget segment. The issue is, Intel already launched a product for this market, and it's called Wildcat Lake — the successor to Twin Lake. The lineup was announced in April and is meant exclusively for low-end laptops, mini-PCs, and edge. It shares an architectural foundation with Panther Lake and is limited to 6 cores.

The 6-core Nova Lake SKU would have reportedly featured 2 P-cores and 4 LP-E cores, which is the same as Wildcat Lake's current maxed-out configuration. The difference would lie in the architecture since Nova Lake is expected to switch to Coyote Cove P-cores and Arctic Wolf E-cores/LP-E cores, while Wildcat Lake (and Panther Lake) right now use Cougar Cove P-cores and Darkmont E-cores/LP-E cores.

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Therefore, a Nova Lake CPU featuring 6 cores would overlap with Wildcat Lake, or more specifically, whatever the Wildcat Lake refresh will be. Either product could end up cannibalizing the other, but since Wildcat Lake already exists with unneeded I/O stripped out to save costs, it makes sense to leave the entry-level Nova Lake silicon behind. After all, demand for Wildcat Lake is exceeding Intel's own expectations.

It's 2+0+4 NVL, intel says demand for WCL is more than expected and intel believes WCL-R is a more competitive product. Both WCL-R and NVL 6C overlap in target marketJune 2, 2026

With the advent of Apple's MacBook Neo, there's a rejuvenated interest in capturing this segment of the market since the Neo is so competitive. At Computex 2026, we've seen a few promising options that should challenge the Neo with perhaps even better specs, all powered by Wildcat Lake. Putting a costlier Nova Lake chip in one of these laptops next year just wouldn't allow for aggressive pricing.

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