Now, these are not intended as serious rivals to premium 2022 cards like the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 and RTX 4090; if Intel GPUs like the Arc A770 and Arc A750 can tangle with the best graphics cards, it’ll be at the cheaper, more 1080p-minded end of the market. Still, with ray tracing support as well as a performance booster in XeSS upscaling, Intel will feel they have a fighting chance. Here’s everything there is to know about the incoming Arc Alchemist GPUs, including their specs and other potentially useful features.
Intel Arc Alchemist prices
Arc Alchemist, or the Arc A-series (as Intel sometimes calls it), is comprised entirely of entry level, low-end and mid-range GPUs. Five core GPUs have been confirmed: the Arc A770, Arc A750, Arc A580, Arc A380, and Arc A310, with the first two also set for fully Intel-built “Limited Edition” models in addition to the various partner card versions. For now, Intel have only confirmed prices for the standard Arc A750, the Arc A770, and the Arc A770 Limited Edition – and only in USD. The Arc A750 will start at $289, with the Arc A770 at $329 and the A770 Limited Edition at $349. None of the A-series, then, will be very expensive, even by 2022 standards. I’ve seen RTX 3050 models that are harsher on the wallet than the Arc A770 Limited Edition, which is supposedly more on the level of the RTX 3060 Ti for performance. Of course, these are only recommended prices – we’ll have to see if these GPUs can avoid the gouging that other modern cards often fall victim to once out in the wild, even after the more egregious period of GPU stock droughts is largely over. No word yet on US or UK pricing for other cards in the range yet either, including the Arc A750 Limited Edition. Though judging by the mere $20 gap between the A770 variants, it will likely cost about the same.
Intel Arc Alchemist release date
Yes! At last! There is one! Specifically, the Arc A750, the Arc A770, and the Arc A770 Limited Edition – i.e. the ones with confirmed prices – will all release on October 12th 2022. Thus will end one of the longest waits in recent PC hardware history; Intel have previously indicated Arc Alchemist release dates within Q1 2022, which passed without announcement, then later suggested they’d be ready by the end of summer. Of course, the A580, A380 and A310 still don’t have even a broader release window, though the A750 and A770 are likely the most appropriate for GPU-hungry gaming PC owners anyway. Actually, the A380 is technically out already, but only in China. We might at least glean some clues from its pricing over there: its official price is 1030 Yuan, which is around £125 / $153, not accounting for regional tax differences. Some retailers are also selling it for around 1300 Yuan, which is about £158 / $192.
Intel Arc Alchemist specs and models
Despite the relative lack of pre-release buzz for GPUs besides the A770 and A750, all the confirmed GPUs have had their specs released in full. Here are the headlines: The Limited Edition variants of the A770 and A750 are akin to Nvidia’s Founders Edition GeForce cards, being built entirely according to Intel’s specifications (including the cooler designs). The A750 Limited Edition appears otherwise identical to the standard version, though the A770 Limited Edition has double the GDDR6 memory of the basic A770. Interestingly, Intel list the “total board power” of both the A770 Limited Edition and A750 Limited Edition as 225W, despite the former having more RAM, ray tracing processors and Xe cores. Ah, Xe cores. These are the cornerstones of Arc Alchemist’s architecture and each contain three important tools: a set of 256-bit vector engines, which handle the conventional drawing of on-screen graphics, 192KB of shared L1 cache, and a set of 1024-bit matrix engines. The latter perform machine learning tasks, like the Tensor cores on Nvidia RTX cards, especially in how one such task can be DLSS-style, AI-assisted upscaling. Expect the higher-tier Alchemist cards to have more Xe cores on board than the A380.
Intel Arc Alchemist features
That upscaling feature is called XeSS (Xe Super Sampling), and works similarly to Nvidia DLSS, AMD FSR 2.0, and FSR 2.1. To boost performance, games are rendered at lower-than-native resolution. Then, XeSS pieces the on-screen image together, using data from previous frames, to make it resemble native res – so you get most, if not all of the sharpness, with more frames per second. Another recent Intel blog post goes into pretty deep technical detail on XeSS; one interesting detail is that it includes its own anti-aliasing, which replaces native edge-smoothers (like TAA) in the upscaling process. DLSS also does this, whereas FSR simply upscales whatever AA the game was already using. Also like DLSS and FSR, XeSS will require games to actively implement support for it. Here are the confirmed takers so far:
Arcadegeddon Anvil: Vault Breakers Chivalry II Chorus Death Stranding Director’s Cut Dolmen Enlisted Gotham Knights Ghostbusters: Spirit Unleashed Ghostwire: Tokyo GRID Legends Naraka: Bladepoint Redout 2 Shadow of the Tomb Raider Super People The DioField Chronicle The Riftbreaker The Settlers Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodhunt
Ray tracing support also comes as standard on Arc Alchemist GPUs, though it remains to be seen how they’ll actually perform with such a demanding graphical luxury enabled. It will also be possible to overclock them, so expect board partner models to launch with modest factory overclocks just as their Nvidia and AMD GPUs most often do.
Intel Arc Alchemist performance
In a “performance showcase” video, the A750 Limited Edition was shown running Control at 1440p/High between 56fps and 66fps. The specs of the test PC weren’t given, but we can safely assume it included one of Intel’s 12th Gen Core chips (which include several of the best gaming CPUs on the market). Intel’s video also included a comparison graph showing the A750 Limited Edition narrowly beating the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 across Control, F1 2021, Cyberpunk 2077, Borderlands 3 and Fortnite. Again, this shows Intel primarily want to muscle in on the more affordable half of the graphics card market; I wouldn’t expect the A770 to aim much higher than beating the RTX 3060 Ti, either. As for the A380, Intel haven’t provided review units outside of China, though some Western outlets (with more money than RPS) have managed to import retail models over to test. The word, unfortunately, is decidedly not good. Hardware Unboxed, for example, benchmarked a Gunnir-made A380 paired with an AMD Ryzen 9 5950X. It only averaged 48fps in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla at 1080p/Medium, 42fps in Shadow of the Tomb Raider at 1080p/Highest, 58fps in Hitman 3 at 1080p/Medium and 52fps in Far Cry 6 at 1080p/Medium. It did have a stronger showing in Resident Evil Village, averaging 68fps at 1080p/Balanced Quality, but was generally only on par or slower than the AMD Radeon RX 6400, and was trounced by other low-end GPUs like the Radeon RX 6500 XT or Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 3050. Hardware Unboxed’s tests also revealed the extent to which the A380 relies on Resizeable BAR, regularly suffering double-digit framerate drops from those already-underwhelming results after ReBAR was disabled. Performance could improve in time, maybe even before the worldwide release, if Intel do some good work with future drivers – and that goes for the Arc A750 as well. Still, what we’ve seen so far hasn’t been very compelling. The one piece of unqualified good news seems to be Arc Alchemist’s AV1 video encoder. AV1 could well be the future of how we watch video online, as it can produce a cleaner image than other current formats (like Nvidia’s H.264) even while using less data to stream. GeForce RTX 30 cards, Radeon RX 6000 cards and (naturally) Intel Arc Alchemist cards all have AV1 decoding capabilities but the Alchemist lineup will feature a proper AV1 encoder as well, making it vastly more accessible to video creators. Unfortunately – for Intel, anyway – these won’t quite be the first GPUs with AV1 encoding, as it will be a standard feature on GeForce RTX 40 series GPUs, the first of which are releasing on October 12th. Arc A-series cards will be a cheaper option, though. If you’d like to know more about AV1, EposVox has a good explainer on it, including some hands-on testing with the Arc A380. Just remember that AV1 encoding will mainly only help you if you’re into video editing or streaming - it won’t help with running games normally.