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We've got both the Intel Arc A750 and A770 Limited Edition graphics cards with the full review coming next week. For now, ...
Should you buy Intel Arc? Chipzilla sent us its in-house “Limited Edition” versions of the Arc A750 and Arc A770 to find out. Let’s dig in. Intel Arc A770 and A750 specs, features, and price ...
Intel’s Arc A750 and A770 are designed to take on Nvidia’s RTX 3060. They succeed for the important budget PC gaming market, despite some early issues.
In the Arc A770 Limited Edition, the ACM-G10 GPU is fully enabled, with all 8 render slices lit up, featuring 32 Xe cores, 32 Ray Tracing Units, 512 XMX Engines (for AI workloads), and 128 ROPs.
The top-of-the-line Arc A770 will arrive on October 12th, starting at $329. This price matches that of Nvidia’s RTX 3060, a card that the A770 is expected to comfortably outperform.
Acer makes plenty of gaming hardware, including laptops, desktops, monitors, and peripherals. Now it looks like it will enter the graphics card market with a little help from Intel's Arc A770 GPU.
Intel’s Arc A770 and A750 were decent at launch, but over the past few months, they’ve started to look like some of the best graphics cards you can buy if you’re on a budget.
The Arc A770 Limited edition is based on the fully-enabled 6nm ACM-G10 GPU, and packs 32 Xe Cores, 32 Ray Tracing Units, 512 EUs, and 512 XMX matrix processors, leaving it with 4,096 unified shaders.
The Arc A770 and A750 are targeting 1080p, and compared to the RTX 3060, they shine. Across my suite of six games, the A750 manages a small lead of 3%, but the A770 shoots ahead with an 11% boost.
The Radeon RX 6600 XT scores some overwhelming wins at 1080p resolution, but the Arc A770 picks up the pace at 1440p and womps on all comers when it comes to ray tracing performance—yes, Intel ...