- Suggestions in drivers suggest that Intel is working on the generation of multiple paintings for their GPU
- This comes at the same time that Arc B770 GPU rumors are floating again
- It is an additional indication that Intel is not abandoning its desktop GPU after the Nvidia agreement
Nvidia leads the race in the graphics card market, nailing many of the best places in our list of the best GPU, and Intel could be taking a page of the Nvidia play book for its ARC desktop GPU.
As reported by Videocardz, a redditor discovered clues in the controller files that suggest that Intel could be ready to enter Xess ‘Multi-Marco Generation’. There is a text that explicitly mentions the characteristic, together with an unidentified logo, but obviously this is far from confirming that Team Blue is planning a rival system for the NVIDIA MFG.
It is also worth noting that Intel has a rumored ARC B770 GPU on the horizon, with a handful of leaks that indicate that the Team team is working hard on this high -end battlemage graphics card that could pack 16 GB of VRM, and if it is real, it would be the strongest GPU of the Blue team.
Recent data records point towards the existence of this GPU (also informed by Videcardz), and work on ArC desktical graphics cards seems to be ongoing despite the recent great Nvidia agreement that Intel has made. So, given all that, it is not unreasonable to think that Team Blue could be working on the generation of multiple paintings to accelerate the picture speeds with their discrete arc products.
In addition to the NVIDIA RTX 5000 series, and the Steam -free scale tool, there is no other way to take advantage of multiple cadres, so it should be interesting to see if Intel really plans to open another option.
Analysis: If this is legitimate, I’m glad to see that Intel is not leaving aside his GPU ARC after the Nvidia association
After the announcement of the Nvidia and Intel association, I noticed a certain level of online concern among the players that Intel could be changing their approach to the ARC desktop GPU. And although, as pointed out, this multipurpose generation suggestion seems to suggest hope for the future: it is possible that it has been in process long before Nvidia collaboration was announced. Only time will say it.
If Intel has a Battlemage GPU with 16 GB of VRM in the wings, as well as multiple frames generation technology to support that, it could mean that the blue team uploads a step in the GPU race against Nvidia and AMD.
Intel could present an even stronger case if he launches the rumored GPU B770 as another affordable option, similar to RADEON RX 9070 XT of the Team Red at the beginning of this year. There is no doubt in my mind that the cheapest prices win fans, but both this graphics card and the MFG support remain mere rumors for now.