Also the TDP listed on CPU’s is for stock clocks ignoring any turbo frequencies.
Scanning through this thread I'm amazed that people are still getting TDP wrong after all this time - it is only loosely related to power draw and especially for Intel CPUs:
Thermal Design Power (TDP) represents the average power, in watts, the processor dissipates when operating at Base Frequency with all cores active under an Intel-defined, high-complexity workload. Refer to Datasheet for thermal solution requirements.
Intel's TDP measurement is the amount you need to dissipate for the CPU to work correctly under its normal design parameters - it is not the power draw.
AMD's "TDP" measurement used to more closely reflect their power draw (hence Typical Board Power nomenclature on their GPUs) but I believe with their latest CPUs it is the actual TDP.
And if the thermal and power use of the CPU is really of concern to you then handily Intel makes a datasheet with more information:
If you do the maths on that it puts the stock all core max load at potentially ~380 watt draw.
EDIT: GN's interview does state that:
"At full all-core frequency in that higher power mode, we don’t reach 510W, but we certainly go well beyond 255W, scoring about 380W maximum. If we apply this to the Intel Spec version, and compare to other CPUs, we get the following:"
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