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The Intel logo’s debut of graphics cards was not considered a big success. The Arc Alchemist graphics were so flawed that they received only mediocre reviews. There was even speculation that the company would abandon the whole project.
New details are provided by Intel regarding its ambitions and plans in discrete graphics cards industry, with the goal of becoming an alternative to AMD and Nvidia.
This plan could come to pass when Battlemage arrives next spring.
Raja Koduar, Intel’s graphics card architect, has repeatedly stated that Arc isn’t moving anywhere. The company agenda now shows Intel’s future plans regarding dedicated graphics.
According to the agenda Intel will launch two 150W SKUs within the Arc series in 2023’s first quarter, namely SKU4-D23–P5 and SKU5-D23–M3, which both have 6GB of memory, 16Gbps interfaces, respectively.
Alchemist+, a refresh of Arc Alchemist’s family, is also on the agenda. This is based on ACM+G21 graphic chips for high-end cards, with TDP between 175-225W to ACM+G20 graphics chips for budget options with TDP 75-100W.
Next year, things are set to get even more exciting when Intel enters enthusiast graphics card markets with the Battlemage series based upon the Xe2-HPG microarchitecture.
The BMG-10 graphics chip comes in Q2 2024 with a TDP 225+W, while the BMG-21 graphics chip arrives in Q2 2024 with a TDP 150+W.
Battlemage is expected bring many significant improvements such as ray-tracing, microarchitecture improvement, new generation memory and new rendering technology supported with machine learning.
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Intel claims that the cards will be targeted at enthusiast and performance gaming. /PCWorld Albanian