M1 iPad Pro Over 50% Faster Than Previous Generation in Early Benchmarks

Last month, Apple introduced a new iPad Pro with the exact same M1 chip discovered in the current Macs, and early benchmark outcomes indicate that the M1 iPad Pro is over 50% faster than the previous-generation iPad Pro.
Based on five genuine Geekbench 5 outcomes (heres the fifth) for the fifth-generation 12.9-inch iPad Pro with the M1 chip, the device has typical single-core and multi-core scores of 1,718 and 7,284, respectively. By contrast, the fourth-generation 12.9-inch iPad Pro with the A12Z chip has typical single-core and multi-core scores of 1,121 and 4,656, respectively, implying that the M1 iPad Pro is around 56% faster.
Geekbench 5: Average Multi-Core Results

M1 MacBook Air: 7,378
M1 iPad Pro: 7,284
Core i9 16″ MacBook Pro: 6,845
A12Z iPad Pro: 4,656

Its worth keeping in mind that the third-generation 12.9-inch iPad Pro with the A12X chip has a higher typical multi-core score of 4,809, likely due to statistical variation, but this still results in the M1 iPad Pro being 51% faster, which lines up with Apples marketing claim that the M1 iPad Pro depends on 50% faster than the previous generation.
The benchmark results reveal that the M1 iPad Pro has essentially identical efficiency as the M1 Macs released last fall. The M1 MacBook Air, for instance, has average single-core and multi-core ratings of 1,701 and 7,378, respectively. Remarkably, this implies the M1 iPad Pro is much faster than a maxed-out 16-inch MacBook Pro with an Intel Core i9 processor, which has typical single-core and multi-core scores of 1,091 and 6,845 respectively.
As for graphics performance, the M1 iPad Pro currently has an average Metal score of 20,578, which depends on 71% faster than the previous-generation iPad Pro with the A12Z chip and roughly equivalent to the graphics performance of M1 Macs.
The new iPad Pro appeared to buy starting April 30, with a launch anticipated on May 21. Evaluations of the gadget are anticipated to drop next week.