On the other hand, there is some confusion about what TDP the processor will offer. For reasons we cannot find, multiple enthusiasts seem to think that the Core i7-1185G7 is a 28 W TDP processor, making it comparable to the Core i7-1068G7. However, going by Intel's naming scheme for the Ice Lake architecture, a processor with the capability of reaching 28 W should have an 8 in its name preceding its GPU suffix. Hence, a 28 W Tiger Lake-U chip should be called the Core i7-1188G7, not the i7-1185G7.

@TUM_APISAK reports that the Core i7-1185G7 achieved a CPU score of 2,922 and a graphics score of 1,296. To put these into context, the Ryzen 7 4800U has been shown to score 1,227 points in the same graphics test, giving the Core i7-1185G7 a 5-6% lead. However, its CPU score falls far shot of what the Core i7-1065G7 is capable. Ultimately, while we doubt that either scores are final, @TUM_APISAK asserts that the graphics score may be.

So, there we have it, a Tiger Lake-U series processor that give us more questions than it does answers. If the Core i7-1185G7 really is a 28 W-capable chip, then it would seem Intel has tweaked its Ice Lake naming scheme. Additionally, while a 3 GHz base clock seems high, its GPU does not seem to offer that much over comparable Ryzen 4000-U series processors.