The screenshot indicates that the processor has 80 cores, along with 672MB of L3 cache, a maximum frequency of 2.5 GHz, and a 350W TDP.
YuuKi_AnS subsequently tweeted that CPU-Z's current version cannot accurately display information about the processor; it actually consists of 2 Granite Rapids samples, each with 80 cores and 160 threads.
Assuming that aside from the threads, other specifications of the Intel Granite Rapids Xeon processor are correct, compared to the Emerald Rapids processor, there is a significant increase not only in the number of cores but also in the L3 cache size. pulsestacks attached a screenshot as follows:
The cache capacity is nearly 6 times that of Intel Sapphire Rapids CPUs and twice that of the flagship Intel Emerald Rapids chip Platinum 8592+.
According to CPU-Z data, the Granite Rapids processor boasts a 320MB L2 cache and a 10MB L1 cache. The core count has also seen a significant increase. Compared to Intel's flagship Emeral Rapids 8592+ CPU, the 80-core Granite Rapids chip has seen a 20% increase in core count, and it outpaces the core count of their flagship Sapphire Rapids by 25%.