Wednesday, December 20th 2023
Intel Arc "Battlemage" GPUs Confirmed for 2024 Release
Intel, in a company presentation made to its channel partners, confirmed that it is looking to release its next generation Arc Xe² discrete GPU lineup, codenamed "Battlemage." This would be Intel's second rodeo with high performance gaming graphics since its 2022 return to the segment with the Arc "Alchemist" series. The One Intel presentation slide talks about what to look forward to from the company in the client segment, in the coming year. The slide states that PC processor, workstation processor, and discrete GPU segments will each see upcoming products, which can be seen as a confirmation for a 2024 launch of "Battlemage." Older company slides had illustrated that the launch of "Battlemage" would be timed around that of the company's "Meteor Lake" and "Arrow Lake" client processors. The company is expected to launch "Arrow Lake" sometime in 2024. With "Battlemage," Intel is looking to offer a linear increase in performance, along with new hardware capabilities. The discrete GPUs from this family are expected to be built on a 4 nm-class foundry node by TSMC.
Sources:
4gamer.net, Wccftech
42 Comments on Intel Arc "Battlemage" GPUs Confirmed for 2024 Release
Wait and see ✓
Fingers crossed ✓
Holding breath ✗
And even if Intel was exiting the business, what would those billions be poured into? It's not like partners design fully working cards, sign supply deals and update their retail channels, all before seeing a working GPU.
And about MTL number being bad, have you seen this? www.phoronix.com/review/meteor-lake-arc-graphics
Q4 2024? We've already known about something something Battlemage in H2 2024 for nearly a year... Alchemist isn't built on 4nm though, so they'll get that sweet shrink juice Here's a wild thought. The chips on this slide align with the input quality of the render from gen to gen, the rest is all gonna be XeSS :)
In fairness, what he reported was that Intel was sitting on the fence about whether to go forward or not. The internet, being the internet, extrapolated that to "It's dead Jim."
I have been quite pleased with my a770; It is a solid 1440p gaming card, and is better for productivity than the RTX 3060 that was replaced.
The performance goals of the top battlemage gpu is 4070ti in gaming and 4080 in compute. Looking forward to getting one this summer.
Against just AMD they can still say they're right and the other camp is wrong. But when Intel also just sticks to common sense and doesn't push RT heavily (which I think they won't, because they simply can't)... things change. Now suddenly Nvidia is the odd one out, between everything else moving in gaming they have a handful of 'awesome RT' pushes.
Also take note of the fact the next gen console is going to be AMD again, so this situation won't get better for Nv either.
but far more important is that damn price, Intel needs to be far lower to be able to catch a lot of customers and build a reputation, I would not mind an A770 16gb but that price is just way too high for waht it is.
A770 - 32 Xe cores
B770 - 64 Xe cores
A770 - 4096 FP32 cores
B770 - 8192 FP32 cores
A770 - 2.1Ghz clock
B770 - 3.0Ghz clock
A770 - 225 watt power draw
B770 - <225 watt power draw.
Hopefully Battlemage won't be just a simple die shrink.
If they fix one of these issues then they will be competitive:
- horrible cache/memory latency/bandwidth
- core dependency on high parallelization
If we judge by the previous release.
:p