Monday, December 2nd 2024
Intel Arc B570 "Battlemage" GPU Details Surface: 18 Xe2 Cores, 10 GB VRAM
Intel's upcoming Arc "Battlemage" graphics card lineup has been exposed through a recent ASRock specification sheet leak, showcasing the company's latest products for the discrete GPU market. The leak details two models, the B580 and B570, with the B570 making a first appearance in the rumor section. The B580, positioned as the flagship model we already covered, features 20 Xe2-Cores and comes equipped with 12 GB of GDDR6 memory on a 192-bit interface, capable of reaching bandwidth speeds of up to 456 GB/s. Its slightly lower-spec sibling, the B570, sports 18 Xe2-Cores and 10 GB of GDDR6 memory on a 160-bit interface, delivering 380 GB/s bandwidth. In ASRock's case, both cards will be factory-overclocked, with the B580 reaching speeds of 2.8 GHz and the B570 hitting 2.6 GHz.
The new graphics cards are designed to operate on a PCIe 4.0 x8 interface. Both models will support modern display standards, including DisplayPort 2.1 and HDMI 2.1. Intel has scheduled the official unveiling of the Battlemage series for December 3, with cards expected to hit shelves on December 12. While the B570's pricing remains under wraps, the B580's rumored $249 price tag suggests Intel is making a serious play for the mid-range market segment. This aggressive pricing strategy, combined with the card's promising specifications, indicates Intel's determination to establish itself as a legitimate mid-range competitor in the discrete GPU segment, which NVIDIA and AMD have long dominated.
Source:
Roland Quandt (Bluesky)
The new graphics cards are designed to operate on a PCIe 4.0 x8 interface. Both models will support modern display standards, including DisplayPort 2.1 and HDMI 2.1. Intel has scheduled the official unveiling of the Battlemage series for December 3, with cards expected to hit shelves on December 12. While the B570's pricing remains under wraps, the B580's rumored $249 price tag suggests Intel is making a serious play for the mid-range market segment. This aggressive pricing strategy, combined with the card's promising specifications, indicates Intel's determination to establish itself as a legitimate mid-range competitor in the discrete GPU segment, which NVIDIA and AMD have long dominated.
31 Comments on Intel Arc B570 "Battlemage" GPU Details Surface: 18 Xe2 Cores, 10 GB VRAM
We lost 2 GB in just two days. I hope Intel releases tomorrow, or it'll be an 8GB card after all.
What confuses me is the number of Intel XMX engines. There are 320 on the B580 but 144 on the B570. There should be the same number per Xe2 core. That would mean 40 Xe2 cores for the B580 if there are 8 XMX engines per core (144/18=8).
Either the 20 Xe2 core rumor on the B580 is wrong or there is a typo in the data sheet? Also the two data sheets are different. One states the number of cores and the other doesn’t.
I guess we will know the full specs tomorrow.
Or a 1080p card with low details and low quality
I do not want to buy any device anymore with any HDMI ports. HDMI has to go. the sooner it dies the better
www.techpowerup.com/gpu-specs/?buswidth=160%20bit&sort=name
The extra FP connections are for multiple monitors that either don’t support daisy chaining or the resolution/refresh rate is too high on each monitor to support extended desktop when daisy chained.
Basically, the four connectors give you guaranteed extended desktop view on four high DP, high refresh rate monitors across most brands and SKUs without specialized hardware.
Not sure about the new one.
And while a few of us can still spot all that on PCs, on mobiles or tablets these are included without a second thought. And I'm not even sure why. While I personally don't consider movies worth pirating, I know several people that are basically ambulant IMDBs from all the content that is available out there, regardless of DRM.