Latest Intel beta drivers confirm upcoming Arc GPU models

Is it going to be too little too late though?

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Intel’s Arc GPUsare already finding their way into laptops, with the full line-up outlined on the official Arc product page. Less is known about the desktop parts though, except that they’re due for release in the second half of the year and will first appear inOEM systems exclusively in China. We know a bit more about these desktop graphics cards now though thanks to the latest beta drivers listing the model names of as-yet-unreleased GPUs.

The beta drivers in question only official support laptops packing Arc A350M, Arc A370M, and the integrated graphics present in Intel’s 12th-Gen mobile CPUs. These solutions are theoretically out there in the wild, although good luck actually getting your hands on any laptop with Intel’s discrete GPUs in them.

pic.twitter.com/fquWmpBwahMay 15, 2022

It’s the other chips mentioned in the drivers (spotted by@momomo_us) that are of more interest. There are five desktop GPUs listed: A770, A750, A580, A380, and A310. Previously there wererumours of a top-end A780and a more affordable A350 too, but neither of these is mentioned in the driver package. Their omission doesn’t mean that they definitely don’t exist, but their existence is a bit more questionable now.

The drivers don’t reveal the actual makeup of these chips, although the specs for the mobile parts combined with previous rumours suggest that the A770 will have 32 Xe Cores and come in two different configurations: one with 16GB of GDDR6 VRAM and one with 8GB of GDDR6. Both of these GPUs are expected to use a 256-bit memory bus and boast 4,096 FP32 cores.

The A750 and A580 drop the Xe Core count down to 24 and 16 respectively, with narrower 192-bit and 128-bit memory busses too. The A380 and A310 meanwhile squeeze this down further to 8 and 4 Xe Cores for the more affordable end of the spectrum.

While we were initially excited about Intel joining the graphics card fray, the longer it takes to get cards actually out to market, the less stoked we become. For one,graphics card pricing is slowly getting back to MSRP levels, and secondly, the next-generation offerings from AMD and Nvidia are due in the second half of the year, with the latest rumours promisingNvidia’s 4000-series GPUs as early as July. That’s potentially before we see Intel’s Arc Alchemist GPUs, at least outside of China.

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Alan has been writing about PC tech since before 3D graphics cards existed, and still vividly recalls having to fight with MS-DOS just to get games to load. He fondly remembers the killer combo of a Matrox Millenium and 3dfx Voodoo, and seeing Lara Croft in 3D for the first time. He’s very glad hardware has advanced as much as it has though, and is particularly happy when putting the latest M.2 NVMe SSDs, AMD processors, and laptops through their paces. He has a long-lasting Magic: The Gathering obsession but limits this to MTG Arena these days.

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