TDP is Thermal Design Power
That's not power consumption, all it is is a recommendation for minimum cooling, its often used, mostly by Intel as something to print on the box to make those who think TDP = Power Consumption think its X amount efficient, for example the 9900K TDP is 95 Watts, ha... ahahaha.... NO!
The way Intel get away with that is print a base clock of 3.6Ghz on the box, at 3.6Ghz the power consumption, and therefore heat output is 95 Watts, but if your MB VRMs are capable of feeding more than 95 Watts and you are using cooling that can dissipate more than 95 Watts of heat it will "boost" higher, upto 4.7Ghz, and in reality the 9900K at 4.7Ghz is a 200 Watt CPU, not 95.
Ryan Shrout, Intel shill extraordinare, on his 9900K review performance benchmarked the 9900K on the best Asus board, but when it came to Power consumption testing, he used the crappiest board he could find, which hard throttled the 9900K to its 3.6Ghz 95 Watt base, and concluded "its a 95 Watt CPU" i propose because with Ryzen at the time showing Intel up for power efficiency they didn't want to get humiliated.