Skip to main content

Intel isn’t giving up on GPUs yet

The Intel logo on the Arc A770 graphics card.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Intel hasn’t said much about its graphics cards lately. We saw the launch of the Arc A770 and A750 late last year, and the A580 just a few months ago, but after the departure of Raja Koduri from Intel’s graphics division earlier this year, the future of Intel Arc has been a bit patchy. It now appears Intel is still planning to deliver on its road map, though.

A slide shared with Japanese gaming outlet 4Gamer shows that Intel is planning to launch a next-gen GPU in 2024. This lines up with Intel’s initial road map, which promised that gamers would see next-gen Battlemage GPUs some time in early 2024.

A slide showing Intel's GPU roadmap.
4Gamer / Intel

As for when in 2024 we’ll see these GPUs, it’s not clear right now. RedGamingTech (via VideoCardz) shared a leaked internal slide from Intel showing the flagship Battlemage GPU arriving between April and June of 2024. The slide also shows an “early enabling” period in the first few months of the year, suggesting Intel may go with a gradual rollout of its next-gen GPUs.

Recommended Videos

We may even hear about the cards at CES 2024 in January. Intel has confirmed already that it’s hosting a keynote on January 9 titled “AI Everywhere.” Intel just launched its Core Ultra CPUs for laptops on December 14, so it’s not clear what new announcements the company is planning for CES. If Battlemage is indeed arriving in the first few months of 2024, we expect that it will receive a nod during the keynote.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Intel isn’t likely going to make big claims about Battlemage, however. Its first generation of Arc GPUs had a notorious release cycle, with several delays and rumors of cancellation. Even at launch, Arc GPUs showed several issues with their drivers. It seems the graphics division has been heads-down working on GPUs and drivers, as we’ve seen massive improvements in Arc performance since the release.

For close to a year, RedGamingTech has claimed that the flagship Battlemage card will offer performance that could rival Nvidia’s RTX 4080. That seems optimistic from what we’ve seen from first-gen Arc GPUs, but there’s still plenty to get excited about in Intel’s follow-up.

First is an AI-driven texture compression technique that Intel detailed during the recent Siggraph 2023. The paper Intel introduced shows both a compression tool that keeps VRAM limitations low in complex scenes, as well as an efficient path tracing algorithm that aims to make the complex rendering technique possible on lower-end GPUs.

Intel introduced another paper during Siggraph Asia 2023 showing a DLSS 3 rival that generates new frames during gameplay. Unlike similar frame-generation methods, Intel proposed frame extrapolation instead of frame interpolation. This predicts future frames rather than generating a frame from past ones, supposedly solving the latency issue we’ve seen with DLSS 3.

It shouldn’t be long before we hear about what Intel has in store for Battlemage. Intel may not shout about its graphics cards from the rooftops, but every indication we’ve seen so far suggests Intel hasn’t given up on Arc yet.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
I’ve reviewed every AMD and Nvidia GPU this generation — here’s how the two companies stack up
Three graphics cards on a gray background.

Nvidia and AMD make the best graphics cards you can buy, but choosing between them isn't easy. Unlike previous generations, AMD and Nvidia trade blows point-for-point in 2024, and picking a brand to go with isn't as easy as counting the dollars in your wallet.

I've reviewed every graphics card AMD and Nvidia have released this generation, comparing not only raw performance, but also features like DLSS and FSR, ray tracing performance, and how VRAM works in modern games. After dozens of graphics card reviews, here's how AMD and Nvidia stack up against each other in 2024.
Nvidia vs. AMD in 2024

Read more
Adobe is giving creators a way to prove their art isn’t AI slop
Zoom blur background in Photoshop on a MacBook.

With AI slop taking over the web, being able to confirm a piece of content's provenance is more important than ever. Adobe announced on Tuesday that it will begin rolling out a beta of its Content Authenticity web app in the first quarter of 2025, enabling creators to digitally certify their works as human-made, and is immediately launching a Content Authenticity browser extension for Chrome to help protect content creators until the web app arrives.

Adobe's digital watermarking relies on a combination of digital fingerprinting, watermarking, and cryptographic metadata to certify the authenticity of images, video, and audio files. Unlike traditional metadata that is easily circumvented with screenshots, Adobe's system can still identify the creator of a registered file even when the credentials have been scrubbed. This enables to company to “truly say that wherever an image, or a video, or an audio file goes, on anywhere on the web or on a mobile device, the content credential will always be attached to it,” Adobe Senior Director of Content Authenticity Andy Parsons told TechCrunch.

Read more
Nvidia’s CEO — yes, one person — is now worth more than all of Intel
Jensen Huang at GTX 2020.

Nvidia is one of the richest companies in the world, so it's no surprise that the company's CEO, Jensen Huang, is quite wealthy. The most recent net worth numbers from Forbes puts into context just how wealthy the executive really is, though. Huang has an estimated net worth of $109.2 billion, which is around $13 billion more than the market cap of Intel across the entire company.

Although Nvidia makes some of the best graphics cards, the obscene amount of money the company has racked up over the past two years stems from its AI accelerators. In 2020, Forbes estimated that Huang was worth $4.7 billion, and even in 2023, after ChatGPT had already exploded onto the scene, the executive was worth $21.1 billion. Now, Huang is the 11th richest person in the world, outpacing Bill Gates, Michael Dell, and Michael Bloomberg.

Read more