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Intel Core 5 120: Recycled six-core chip priced above newer Intel options

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Intel's Core 5 120 rebrand arrives with eye-watering early pricing. An Intel facility in Oregon pictured. (Image source: Intel)
Intel’s Core 5 120 rebrand arrives with eye-watering early pricing. An Intel facility in Oregon pictured. (Image source: Intel)

Intel has quietly rebranded its six-core i5-12400 silicon as the new Core 5 120 and 120F—yet both chips carry provisional price tags well above faster, newer CPUs in Intel’s lineup.

Intel has revived a familiar silicon design under a new badge, quietly turning the once-popular Core i5-12400 series into the freshly named Core 5 120 and Core 5 120F. Early retailer listings spotted by industry watcher momomo_us show provisional prices of $246.01 for the standard chip and $216.66 for the graphics-less F variant. Although these figures may merely be placeholders, they currently place the pair well above faster, newer processors in Intel’s own stack.

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At heart, little has changed. Both newcomers still rely on six performance cores with Hyper-Threading—no efficiency cores are present—and share an 18 MB L3 cache. The Core 5 120 reportedly lifts its maximum turbo to 4.5 GHz (from 4.4 GHz on 2022’s i5-12400) and carries a trimmed turbo TDP of 110 W. The “F” model drops integrated graphics altogether, obliging system builders to add a discrete GPU.

The problem is price. At almost $250, the Core 5 120 costs roughly 40 percent more than Intel’s faster Core i5-14400 ($176) and even eclipses the unlocked Core i5-14600K ($199) on Amazon at the time of writing. The cut-down Core 5 120F fares no better: its preliminary tag is double that of the still-available i5-12400F, which can be found for just under $110.

Such mark-ups are not unprecedented—AMD’s Ryzen 3000XT and 5000XT refreshes followed a similar trajectory—but history suggests steeper launch prices on recycled silicon rarely last. If the Core 5 120 family settles closer to the sub-$100 mark hinted at by some commentators, it could find a niche in budget gaming towers where six Raptor-Lake-class cores at 4.5 GHz remain perfectly adequate for esports titles.

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Until that correction occurs, however, Intel’s rebrand risks being overshadowed by its own newer—and cheaper—Core i5 alternatives as well as AMD’s value-oriented offerings. Builders eyeing a low-cost upgrade on the aging LGA 1700 platform may wish to watch retailer listings for more realistic street prices before committing to these chips.

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Nathan Ali, 2025-08- 3 (Update: 2025-08- 3)

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