

This is almost twice the score of the previous iPad Pro, around 12,000, and around 2000 points higher than the M1 MacBook Air with the 7-Core GPU, scoring around 19,000, and only around 1000 points lower than the M1 MacBook Pro with the 8-Core GPU, scoring around 22,000. On the Geekbench Metal Graphics Test, the iPad Pro scores as high as 21,600. But, wait until you see the M1 iPad Pro’s metal graphics score on Geekbench. This is basically in the margin of error, and in real-world tasks, there would be no performance difference. The M1 MacBook Air scores around 1725 in Single-Core and 7500 in Multi-Core.

According to Geekbench, the M1 iPad Pro scores 1711 for Single-Core and 7359 for Multi-Core.

After all, the iPad Pro way thinner and has no fan, so it needs to throttle to prevent overheating, right? Wrong. Just because the new iPad Pro has the M1 Chip doesn’t necessarily mean it is as powerful as the M1 Macs.
