Friday, February 25th 2022

Intel Fails to Deliver on Promised Day-0 Elden Ring Graphics Driver

It seems that someone at Intel forgot to press "post" on the company's promised day-0 driver update for one of this year's most anticipated games - Elden Ring. The company previously announced a partnership with Elden Ring developer FromSoftware in the development of an updated driver that wold give Intel-based Elden Ring players streamlined performance and a (hopefully) bug-free experience when it comes to graphics rendering. But Elden Ring's launch day of February 24th has come and gone - and Intel is mum on where exactly its updated driver lies. For now, the latest available Intel graphics driver stands at version 101.1121 - released in November last year.

It may be the case that the driver development hit an unexpected snag, or perhaps Intel has simply opted to delay the driver's launch until there are actually some discrete-level graphics cards available for purchase - the company's initial Arc Alchemist lineup is expected to be announced and launched later this month. That would make sense - especially considering how a driver update this close to release might include some interesting data on the upcoming graphics cards that could be pursued by data miners. Even so, it doesn't seem like a good PR move for Intel to have loudly promised an updated driver and then fail to release it - especially as Intel's uphill battle in the discrete GPU market is just beginning. Perhaps the driver developers are having too much fun with the critically and consumer-acclaimed latest installment from FromSoftware?
Sources: Intel via Twitter, via Videocardz
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33 Comments on Intel Fails to Deliver on Promised Day-0 Elden Ring Graphics Driver

#26
Vayra86
TheoneandonlyMrKErr, looks on scan,. ,. No.

But Xe is in laptops,

Way Togo though, upping they're game on the timing, and even delivery front.
Definitely upped their game :) They produce PR for drivers now too.
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#27
Octopuss
TheoneandonlyMrKErr, looks on scan,. ,. No.

But Xe is in laptops,

Way Togo though, upping they're game on the timing, and even delivery front.
So Intel DOES have its own graphic card then? Obviously I am not talking about that integrated GPU bullshit they've had in the CPUs for 20 years.
Posted on Reply
#28
TheoneandonlyMrK
chrcolukdo 0 day drivers actually do anything noteworthy though?
Allow you to actually play a game you just bought ?!
Posted on Reply
#29
OneMoar
There is Always Moar
for what hardware?
Posted on Reply
#30
chrcoluk
TheoneandonlyMrKAllow you to actually play a game you just bought ?!
I have never had to download a driver to play a new game before, is that needed on the Intel hardware then?
Posted on Reply
#31
TheoneandonlyMrK
chrcolukI have never had to download a driver to play a new game before, is that needed on the Intel hardware then?
It is what it is, no Intel like others promised a driver with optimization !,

Most games should Just work but optimisation(wtaf my phone spelt it right ) is generally required to remove issues and up performance etc plus Intel above all others has games that won't work on they're hardware so yes they're needed.
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#32
mama
Ahh Intel. Classic overpromise and underdeliver (if they do). Insert examples here... They're better when they announce and release a product when it's ready, like Alder Lake.
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#33
thesmokingman
Yea... not surprised. What makes it worse is that there's like what five guys waiting on this driver?
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