Intel's APO (Application Optimization) feature for 14th Gen CPUs brings in significant performance gains in games that support it.
The Intel Application Optimization feature or APO in short harnesses the power of Intel's hybrid architecture, which compromises respective P-Cores and E-Cores. The feature has derived its roots from "Thread Director", which was introduced within the Windows 11 OS to manage individual thread processing based on the workload to optimize the performance. So Intel's Application Optimizer is a mere replica designed for implementation in video games, rather than synthetic workloads.
We now understand that some threads are in high demand at one point but not so high demand at another. You don't want to tax the CPU with that because it could impact power and so forth. So, the next iteration is this.
What APO does is we test the games and see, okay, this might benefit from a fine-tuning of the policy just because of the unique way this game behaves
-Roger Chandler, Intel's VP and GM, Enthusiast PC and Workstation, Client Computing Group via TweakTown
There hasn't been much testing around the Intel APO feature considering that the process of making it work is a bit tedious but Reddit user, u/LightMoisture, has utilized Intel's APO feature through Intel's Dynamic Tuning Technology driver with Intel's Core i9-14900K CPU and has seen some big performance boosts within games.
Metro Exodus on Core i9-14900K CPU (w/ APO Enabled):
Metro Exodus on Core i9-14900K CPU (w/ APO Disabled):
He exclaims that the process was lengthy and "bothering" enough, however, it didn't stop him from reaching the depths. After downloading Intel's APO from Microsoft Store came time for its implementation, and the results received by
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