Last May, we first saw the exposure of Raptor Lake 13th-generation Core, which mentioned that it would support the new DLVR power supply mechanism. Later I learned that DLVR represents Digital Linear Voltage Regulator, which means digital linear voltage regulator, which can great

In May last year, we first saw the exposure of Raptor Lake 13th generation Core, which mentioned that it would support the new DLVR power supply mechanism.

Later I learned that DLVR represents Digital Linear Voltage Regulator, and the digital linear regulator means, which can greatly improve power supply efficiency.

According to Intel, it works in parallel with power supply on the motherboard and can increase power management efficiency by up to 20%, thereby greatly improving the platform's energy efficiency.

However, DLVR is not visible on the released 13th generation Core processor, and Intel did not mention it at all.

Asus partial motherboard BIOS has an "CPU DLVR Bypass Mode Enable" option, but it has no effect whether it is turned on, off or automatically.

Asus' overclocking expert Shamino confirmed when interacting with netizens that the DLVR function does exist in the 13th generation Core processor, but it is blocked by the hardware and is not enabled and may be enabled on future processors. Will

be the 14th generation Core of Meteor Lake? However, at that time, the base will likely replace the interface, and the power supply of the processor and motherboard will change again.

Interestingly, the latest rumors say that due to the performance problems of the Intel 4 process, the 14th-generation Core will only appear on laptop mobile terminals, and will not be used on desktops. Instead, Intel will increase the 13th-generation Core by 100-200MHz frequency as a transitional replacement.

So, will DLVR be prepared for this generation of "toothpaste"? It seems reasonable to improve energy efficiency and thus increase the frequency.