Compare CPUs Side by Side With Real Benchmark Data, Not Spec Sheets
A searchable CPU benchmark table powered by PassMark data. Compare multiple processors with visual progress bars and find the best value for your budget.
Shopping for a CPU based on spec sheets is misleading. Core count and clock speed tell you part of the story, but architecture differences mean a 6-core chip can outperform an 8-core in real workloads. The only honest comparison is benchmark data from actual testing.
Z.Tools CPU Ranking pulls PassMark benchmark scores into a searchable table so you can compare processors side by side. No marketing fluff, no synthetic spec comparisons. Just numbers from a standardized test suite.

CPU 排行榜
比较和排名 CPU 性能
What PassMark scores actually mean
PassMark runs a suite of tests that measure CPU performance across different workloads: integer math, floating point, compression, encryption, sorting, physics simulation, and single-threaded tasks. The overall score is a composite of all these tests.
A higher score means better performance in the PassMark test suite. It does not mean better performance in every possible workload. A CPU that scores well in multi-threaded tests might lose to a different chip in single-threaded tasks, and vice versa.
The scores are useful for relative comparison. If CPU A scores 30,000 and CPU B scores 20,000, CPU A is roughly 50% faster in PassMark's workload mix. Your real-world experience depends on what you actually do with the computer.
Searching and comparing
The table is searchable. Type a model name or number and the list filters in real time. This is useful when you know exactly what you are looking for.
For comparison, select multiple CPUs and the tool shows them side by side with progress bars. The visual bars make it obvious how different processors stack up. You can see at a glance whether the difference between two chips is marginal or significant.
The data source
The benchmark data comes from PassMark and is mirrored on a CDN for fast loading. The data refreshes every 24 hours, so the scores stay current as new benchmarks are submitted.
PassMark collects results from real users running their benchmark software. This means the scores reflect actual hardware behavior, including thermal throttling, memory configurations, and other real-world factors that synthetic spec comparisons ignore.
Practical uses
Building a PC. Pick a budget, search for CPUs in that price range, and compare the benchmark scores. The progress bars show you which chip gives you the most performance per dollar.
Upgrading. If you are considering an upgrade, compare your current CPU against the one you are eyeing. If the benchmark improvement is only 15%, it might not be worth the cost.
Checking compatibility with workloads. Some tasks benefit from high single-threaded performance (gaming, some creative apps). Others scale with core count (video rendering, compilation). PassMark shows both the overall score and single-threaded score.
What it does not do
No pricing data. The tool shows benchmark scores, not prices. You will need to check a retailer for current pricing.
No recommendation engine. It does not tell you which CPU to buy. It gives you the data to make your own decision.
No overclocking data. The scores reflect stock performance. Overclocked results are not separated out.
The tool does one thing: show you PassMark benchmark data in a searchable, comparable format. If you are choosing between CPUs, the data is here.
CPU Ranking · Z.Tools
Compare and rank CPU performance
