Inter Gamer Days is your opportunity to learn which Intel powered computer is right for you. From August 18th to September 4th, Intel Gamer Days brings savings on Intel based laptops and opportunities to learn more about Intel processors. Computing technology is constantly improving and Intel is leading the way with new processors every year. In this article, I’ll help you to understand these processors so you can more easily decide which computer to purchase. Read about the difference between 12th gen and 13th gen Intel processors, then enter for a chance to win one of two laptops: these are two of the most powerful gaming laptops you can find be sure to follow the directions below carefully for the best chance to win.

Why does it matter what processor you buy

The processor is arguably the most important part of the computer. Does this scenario sound familiar: your old computer becomes sluggish, taking a lot longer to start, is slow to open programs seemingly remaining frozen, doing nothing for long periods of time. This is likely caused by a processor that can no longer keep up with the demands that the software programs are making. Those programs get updated regularly over the internet and those updates often require up-to-date processors to work smoothly. So your old processor didn’t stop working: it’s working as hard as it can but it’s just getting asked to do way more than it was originally designed to do.

New Intel processors are designed to handle the demands of modern software programs. Intel has a range of new processors, from their Core i5 to their Core i9, optimized for different use cases. The first thing to know is that i9 is faster than i7 and both are faster than i5. That doesn’t mean everyone should run out and spend the extra money on the fastest processor. Here is my take on which one is best for you.

Which processor do I need if I am getting a new laptop for school and work application, email, web searches, and for streaming movies and music

If you use your computer for school or work, as a general purpose productivity machine, then the Core i5 is likely perfect for your needs. It will not only be fast, whether you are using any Microsoft office program, web browser, or email application, it will play music and streaming TV and movies with ease. In fact, the newest generation of Intel’s Core i5 processors will be future friendly: it’ll perform great for the full duration of a university degree!

Which processor do I need if I am getting a new laptop for many different uses including playing the latest games with ease and live streaming

If you intend to use your new computer to play the latest high-performance video games, then your should be looking at the newest Core i7 processors. These have 16 processing cores (four more than the Core i5) and more cores equates to more processing power. You’ll need that power for the latest games which put some of highest demand on computers of any software you can use. With the newest Core i7 processor in your computer, you’ll be able to play almost any game available just as well as any professional gamer: the only limit to your gaming performance will be your skill.

Another very demanding task is live streaming. Content creators with a fast computer produce professional looking video streams and can more easily build their audience. If you intend to create content for fun of for profit, you’ll likely want a faster processor in your new computer like the two prizes we are giving away: both have Core i7 processors!

Why do I need an Intel Core i9 processor

Do you want the fastest computer … one that will handle really demanding tasks today and for many years to come? The Core i9 processor is likely what you want. It has 24 cores to ensure no matter how demanding the task—gaming, visual design, complex science or math applications—it will exceed your expectations. So if you demand the fastest, if you are a design guru, if you are a professional gamer, or aspire to be one, then the i9 will be worth the investment.

Should I get a 12th gen or 13th gen Intel processor.

This is another excellent question you may have. Last year at this time I wrote about how the 12th gen processors were a huge leap forward in processor design compared to the 11th gen processors. The improvement came from a new hybrid architecture grouping a number of performance cores (designed for demanding tasks) with efficiency cores (designed to handle maintenance and less demanding tasks) all working simultaneously for faster performance than had previously been possible. In the last year, Intel improved on the design of that hybrid architecture and released the 13th gen line of processors. These brought a huge leap in performance again (up to 24% improvement over 12th gen processors). If you purchase a computer with a 12th gen Intel processor, you will likely save some money and will be getting a very decent laptop. However, if you purchase a computer with a 13th gen Intel processor, you will likely spend a little more and get what you pay for with faster performance for many years of fun and productivity.

How can you tell which Intel processor is in a laptop at Best Buy?

Best Buy has a huge selection of computers, and these come with a variety of different Intel processor lines. In fact, you can still find 10th gen Intel processor computers at Best Buy. I personally don’t recommend you get one of those if you intend to put it to work for a full university degree. Spend a little more, if you can.

I suggest you shortlist a few computers with 12th gen processors and a few with 13th gen processors, compare their specs (memory, storage, etc) and get the one that works with your budget and is most suitable for how you want to use it. As I said above, software programs get more complex, more demanding, every year. The software in development right now, will be designed for the best processors available right now. Eventually, over the next few years, an older processor will start to show its age: a new processor (12th or 13th gen) not so much.

Best Buy makes it easy to know which processor is present on each laptop they carry. In the name of each laptop, Best Buy shows you the type of processor and which generation too. So take some time to look at the selection of laptops and find the one perfect for you.

If you win this contest, they you will be really set up for success at school, success at work, and success at play! Look at these two prizes then enter.

ASUS Zephyrus G16 16″ Gaming Laptop – Eclipse Grey (Intel Core i7-12700H/1TB SSD/16GB RAM/GeForce RTX 4050)

MSI Stealth 16 Studio 16″ Gaming Laptop – Star Blue (Intel Core i7-13620H/1TB SSD/32GB RAM/RTX 4060)

How to enter

Entering this contest will be fun and you can enter in three different ways:

  1. In a comment below: tell us what is the most demanding software you have ever used on a computer and what that software was used for. For a valid entry, your answer must be specific. For example, if it was for video editing, tell us the name of the application; if it was for gaming, tell us the name of that game.
  2. Social post: For two additional entries, create a public post on a social media channel sharing with your friends and followers that you are entering a Best Buy blog contest to win an Intel powered gaming laptop. Let your friends know which of the two laptops you are hoping to win; include the hashtag #IntelgamerDaysContest, so we can find your post, and include a picture from this contest page. Then return here and tell us in a comment below on which channel you posted it and the name of your channel (since many people use pseudonyms) so that we can check and verify your entry. You can use any social media channel (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Thread, LinkedIn, etc.), but the post must be public so we can verify it is there.
  3. Email a photo: If you visit any Best Buy store, take a picture with your smartphone of the laptop section in a store showing several Intel powered laptops available. Then in an email to bestbuyblog@bestbuycanada.ca with the subject line “Intel at Best Buy Contest” tell us the location of the store (city, street) and attach the picture.

What you can win

At the end of the contest, we will randomly select two (2) winners from all eligible entries. These winners will be randomly assigned to win one of the two laptop prizes: the Asus Zephyrus G16 or the MSI Stealth 16.

This contest runs from August 18th to September 5th.

Remember you can enter up to four times as mentioned above. Perhaps you’ve been trying to win a prize in a Best Buy Canada contest for many years and just have not been lucky. Hedge your bet by telling all of your friends and family that you really need their support for this amazing contest. They’ll likely be happy to enter this contest too.

Win a gaming laptop during Intel Gamer Days contest rules and regulations

Good luck.

Martin Renaud
Editor in Chief
Martin loves working with the talented editors and writers on the Best Buy Blog as Editor-in-Chief. During his spare time he is either working on his next novel, cooking up a masterpiece in the kitchen, or adding some smart tech to his new home on Mayne Island in British Columbia.

957 COMMENTS

  1. I would say that the most demanding software I’ve ever used would be trying to play Crysis on PC / Microsoft Windows! It was crazy slow and I couldn’t even get past the loading screen.

  2. The most demanding was Adobe Photoshop as I could never figure how to edit my photos, too many choices.

  3. The most demanding software that I use is my multitrack recording software. I use an older version of Vegas but would like to upgrade to ProTools but my computer is not powerful enough. I would like an i7 or i9 processor and then I should be able to use various types of recording software and add ons.

  4. paint shop pro (Corel) – photo editing, art, graphic design. the program is a memory hog. It is less of a hog than photoshop, but still pretty bad. My 10 year old laptop has troubles

  5. Adobe Photoshop both hubby and I use it to edit our photos and some days it seems like it’s running at a snail’s pace

  6. I used trading software with customized trading signals that were mathematical complex and then graphed real time.

  7. Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Premier Pro are both power intensive. I use photoshop for my photos and premier pro for video editing.

  8. While not a gamer, I use QuickBooks for my office from home & also have some big Excel files that benefit from the newer Intel processors. They have always been the gold standard so I always look for them when making home or office purchases.

  9. Microsoft Solitaire is the most demanding software I ever used, those intense graphics eat up all of my memory.

  10. The most demanding app I’ve ever used was Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020. My PC was chugging like crazy and I had to turn the settings way down!

  11. My laptop has a issue running Half-Life: Alyx and it would be nice to not have dropped frames and lag. Those issues can cause me some motion sickness that I don’t really get in other games.

  12. Probably Rhino 7 in terms of grasshopper calcs and mesh generation. Really need a gaming pc in those scenario!

  13. I guess the most demanding software I used was Adobe InDesign for hundreds of pages of a brochure that was to be printed (found verification). Granted, that’s not a crazy piece of software, but the images can definitely make it go slow, especially if they are high quality.

  14. Probably Adobe Premier Pro for video editing and production. Using the software alone is resource intensive, let alone the actual processing aspect.

  15. The most demanding software I’ve ever used is a spreadsheet editor by the name of Microsoft Excel with over 68,000 lines of data and various tables and font formats.

  16. it has to be Adobe Photoshop and I used it to edit photos and make some cool ones but it always brought my PC to a crawl

  17. The most demanding software I’ve ever run on a computer would have to be Adobe Premiere Pro for video editing. I ran it on my Asus Strix G15, but it was extremely laggy as I had a slower mobile NVIDIA chip (1650 or 1050?).

  18. I use various programs for 3d printing but this MatterControl program really stresses my PC.
    I use it just for design work and have 32GB of DDR5; but it’s still slow at crunching the numbers

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