zo0lykas so basicly if number lower its better?

For die size, if you're talking about compute power, a bigger die will give you more computing power always, unless cavemen designed the die.If all things are equal--same transistor/trace size inside the die (same manufacturing process) then bigger is always better.... The bigger the die, the more transistors you can cram into it, therefore, the more you can process in one cycle.When they shrink down to a new process, say from 24nm to 14nm, the die shrinks to about half it's original size and keeps the same amount of transistors inside. Both chips can process the same amount of information in one cycle, just that the 14nm process die will do it with less power consumption.There's die size and process size. Normally when they shrink down to a new process, they will just add more transistors to make up for the freed up power consumption.For apples to apples comparison, a smaller die and process version of the same chip will be a 'better' chip.So, yes, a smaller die is better. And no, a smaller die is not better.