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It's been a busy couple of days when it comes to Intel and its Arc graphics cards, as not only has the company showed off the Arc A770—which looks identical to the Arc A750—but the company has also refuted that it was ever planning to release an Arc A780 card, despite the existence of the A380 and supposedly an A580. A leak with price brackets and performance tiering has also leaked, which gives us a much better understanding of how Intel is planning on positioning its Arc graphics cards versus NVIDIA and AMD and it doesn't look like Intel is as confident as it sounded just a few months ago.
LinusTechTips got the honour to reveal the Arc A770 card, although there appear to be minuscule differences to the physical appearance between it and the Arc A750. The only thing noticeable is a 3-pin header, possibly for some kind of RGB syncing, next to the 8- and 6-pin power connectors, something not present on the A750 card that Gamers Nexus showed off earlier this week. The good news is that the Arc A770 seems to be running cool, as the card was reportedly only hitting 69 degrees C during some hands-on time, although this will apparently be covered in a separate video next week.
However, far more interesting than some pictures of the cards, is Intel's new product and price tiering leak, where the company has placed its Arc A700-series lower than expected compared to the competition. The Arc A750 sits below the RTX 3060 and the Radeon RX 6600 in what looks like an official slide that was posted by Wccftech. The A750 is said to be an 8 GB card with a 225 Watt TDP, whereas the Arc A770 will be available in 8 and 16 GB SKUs and will end up competing with the RTX 3060 Ti and the Radeon RX 6650 XT. The only good news here is that the two cards sit firmly in the $300-399 price bracket, with the A750 possibly being somewhat below that, depending on how accurately one is willing to interpret the SKU placement relative to the price brackets.
In related news, Ryan Shrout went on record on Twitter, saying that "Despite some rumors to the contrary, there is no Intel Arc A780 and there was never planned to be an A780. Let's just settle that debate." This is hard to believe and it's more likely that the company has decided to cut its losses on this generation and wait until Battlemage arrives to launch a higher-end product SKU. In further related news, those that took part in the Intel Xe HPG Scavenger Hunt, Intel will be giving away 100 A770 and 100 A750 cards, but it's not clear yet how the winners will be able to get their hands on the cards.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
LinusTechTips got the honour to reveal the Arc A770 card, although there appear to be minuscule differences to the physical appearance between it and the Arc A750. The only thing noticeable is a 3-pin header, possibly for some kind of RGB syncing, next to the 8- and 6-pin power connectors, something not present on the A750 card that Gamers Nexus showed off earlier this week. The good news is that the Arc A770 seems to be running cool, as the card was reportedly only hitting 69 degrees C during some hands-on time, although this will apparently be covered in a separate video next week.
However, far more interesting than some pictures of the cards, is Intel's new product and price tiering leak, where the company has placed its Arc A700-series lower than expected compared to the competition. The Arc A750 sits below the RTX 3060 and the Radeon RX 6600 in what looks like an official slide that was posted by Wccftech. The A750 is said to be an 8 GB card with a 225 Watt TDP, whereas the Arc A770 will be available in 8 and 16 GB SKUs and will end up competing with the RTX 3060 Ti and the Radeon RX 6650 XT. The only good news here is that the two cards sit firmly in the $300-399 price bracket, with the A750 possibly being somewhat below that, depending on how accurately one is willing to interpret the SKU placement relative to the price brackets.
In related news, Ryan Shrout went on record on Twitter, saying that "Despite some rumors to the contrary, there is no Intel Arc A780 and there was never planned to be an A780. Let's just settle that debate." This is hard to believe and it's more likely that the company has decided to cut its losses on this generation and wait until Battlemage arrives to launch a higher-end product SKU. In further related news, those that took part in the Intel Xe HPG Scavenger Hunt, Intel will be giving away 100 A770 and 100 A750 cards, but it's not clear yet how the winners will be able to get their hands on the cards.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source