coercitiv
Diamond Member
LIMITED EDITION is just the name, not an attribute of the SKU. The LIMITED EDITION cards are as limited as Sapphire TOXIC cards are toxic! 😛According to Intel, the 16GB is a limited sku as well.
LIMITED EDITION is just the name, not an attribute of the SKU. The LIMITED EDITION cards are as limited as Sapphire TOXIC cards are toxic! 😛According to Intel, the 16GB is a limited sku as well.
Quite impressive in Metro Exodus. It actually does look like Intel has more ray tracing oomph than NVIDIA and it can really shine in games lake these. Also the higher the resolution the better it does relative to competition.
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Somewhat similar case in Control with RT enabled.
It probably should be trading blows with RTX 3070 class cards if the drivers didn't held it back.
LIMITED EDITION is just the name, not an attribute of the SKU. The LIMITED EDITION cards are as limited as Sapphire TOXIC cards are toxic! 😛
Written Kit Guru reviews for both models.
https://www.kitguru.net/components/...-moass/intel-arc-a770-limited-edition-review/
https://www.kitguru.net/components/...-moass/intel-arc-a750-limited-edition-review/
He notes that despite okay fps that the cards were borderline unplayable inCyberpunkcorrection Days Gone. It gets worse from there.
www.kitguru.net
I will focus on the negatives from the reviews I have seen and read so far for those that are pressed for time and need the quick and dirty.
Quality of life issues are numerous. Audio cut out, audio device disappearing, reboots required for troubleshooting. VR rendering problems, GPU installation and detection problems. Some requiring experience and extra hardware or iGPU to troubleshoot. Among its biggest weaknesses are the most popular things i.e. 1080p gaming (which something like 65% of gamers still use.) Performance issues and bugginess in some of the most popular games like GTAV, CS:GO, and Apex Legends. No fan speed control for the end user yet. Though in all fairness, the cards don't run hot or loud. PITA to disassemble. Worthless for systems without rebar. This one everybody has known, and Intel practically screams it at you, but it is a very real drawback for those owners.
The biggest issue of all; price. It doesn't matter why Intel has to charge this much, the prices are bad. AMD wins there. Nvidia wins on quality of life and good ray tracing capability.
I fell for it too.Yes, yes, yes. OK.
Here's the box for the Acer A770 OC... 16GB modelThey said stock of the 16GB was going to be really limited and that the generally available stock was going to be the 8GB variants of both cards.

Not just 1080p, the 1440p performance is a bit weak too, while its not strong enough to use as a 4k card.
His job was to improve it or outright tell them that it was a bad idea to go ahead with it. If it were me, I would have got it in writing from them that I will do my best with the non-optimal architecture being handed over to me. Also, my mind keeps going back to my suspicion that Raja just isn't as good as the GPU architects at AMD/NVIDIA. He doesn't really understand the subtleties and nuances of what makes a GPU efficient. His approach is more brute force, hence the bigger die size and higher power draw.Semianalysis said Raja was handed the worst GPU architecture out there. It's true. It seems like the performance is last gen per shader/fillrate/bandwidth.
I agree about Raja. He was given free hand and a blank check. He was hired for his supposed expertise and the belief he would deliver the goods. While really appreciate his honesty in that interview, it felt like an apology and please don't fire me I will do better next time.His job was to improve it or outright tell them that it was a bad idea to go ahead with it. If it were me, I would have got it in writing from them that I will do my best with the non-optimal architecture being handed over to me. Also, my mind keeps going back to my suspicion that Raja just isn't as good as the GPU architects at AMD/NVIDIA. He doesn't really understand the subtleties and nuances of what makes a GPU efficient. His approach is more brute force, hence the bigger die size and higher power draw.
And to think he has rumoured to have been in with a shot of becoming Intel CEO. No wonder Intel are in trouble!I agree about Raja. He was given free hand and a blank check. He was hired for his supposed expertise and the belief he would deliver the goods. While really appreciate his honesty in that interview, it felt like an apology and please don't fire me I will do better next time.
The semiaccutate statement shouldn't be that far off. Intel stated that the Xe architecture was the basis of Arc. Granted that it is a second generation of the design, it isn't too far removed from it. As we see in benchmarks, with relatively similar memoty bandwidth, Tiger Lake Xe is close to Cezanne in gaming performance. Cezanne's iGPU is Vega VII based. Rembrandt is significantly faster than Alder Lake mobile's iGPU with similar bandwidth.
His job was to improve it or outright tell them that it was a bad idea to go ahead with it. If it were me, I would have got it in writing from them that I will do my best with the non-optimal architecture being handed over to me. Also, my mind keeps going back to my suspicion that Raja just isn't as good as the GPU architects at AMD/NVIDIA. He doesn't really understand the subtleties and nuances of what makes a GPU efficient. His approach is more brute force, hence the bigger die size and higher power draw.
Yup. Intel will sweeten the pot for them to go in this direction.I suspect OEMs will do all Intel builds.
Enabling Resizable bar won't be an issue for systems people bought in last 4-5 years. Even my old b350 + 2700x +RX6600XT combo has Resizable bar enabled and working. To my surprise even supports 5950x in that motherboard.
Just because the combo has the ability to enable ReBar, it doesn't mean that it can use it optimally. I've been looking at people that have benched their 2700x chips with rebar on and off, and it doesn't appear to do so well with it. I'm interested to see if someone actually tests the Arcs with a 2700x and how it performs, specifically because I have one myself. I currently have a 1070ti, so it might be a decent upgrade for me that offers 16GB of VRAM.Enabling Resizable bar won't be an issue for systems people bought in last 4-5 years. Even my old b350 + 2700x +RX6600XT combo has Resizable bar enabled and working. To my surprise even supports 5950x in that motherboard.
Maybe Intel will offer to cover their support costs? Raja has access to a vast pool of Indian call center talent 🙂If they end up having trouble moving them in retail channels it seems doubtful system integrators will want the tech support issues of people contacting them with driver issues. Just wondering.
Anything with more than 8GB VRAM would be a decent upgrade for you. I say buy A770, if you are prepared to deal with the early adopter issues.I currently have a 1070ti, so it might be a decent upgrade for me that offers 16GB of VRAM.