- Intel Intel’s high -end Battle GPU were canceled according to a reliable leakage
- According to rumors, his “BMG-G31” had a 256-bit memory bus with 32 10th cores
- We could still see high -end offers with the next range of celestial arc
While the GPUs of Battlemage Arc B580 and B570 of Intel provided excellent and affordable mid -range options for PC players, Team Blue has not yet made a high -end GPU to compete with NVIDIA (because AMD is also mainly concentrated on mid -range space in the future). Unfortunately, it now seems that the wait will continue.
According to a deemed leak, Jaykihn0 on X, the alleged high -end GPU plans of Intel were interrupted in the third quarter of 2024: in other words, GPUs based on XE2 would have been canceled up to 24 GB of VRAM were canceled. The “BMG-G31” matrix would have had a 256-bit memory bus with 32 10th cores and at least 16 GB of GDDR6 VRAM.
All hopes of a high -end high -end alternative to NVIDIA RTX GPUs are apparently more thin than ever, because AMD and Intel continue to target affordable options for consumers.
Although Jaykihn0 suggests that there is currently no update on the next discreet GPU range, it is certainly not over for potentially diving on the high -end market. Celestial GPUs use XE3P architecture, which could involve high -end GPUs and improved features such as the generation of Xess frames – however, it is not yet clear when they are ready for consumers.
In the meantime, Intel’s XE3 architecture will be used for the next Panther Lake processors, including probably mobile processors for ultrabooks and pocket computers. There is a lot to hope for at the end of Team Blue, especially after the success of its current battlemage GPUs, and processors like the main Ultra 7 258V.
We seriously need high -end competition that we can get Intel
If it was not already clear enough, the GPU market has an urgent need to help: scalping, price inflation and low availability are at a record level, and the only way to see this change is if consumers do not acquire the purchase of too expensive GPU. However, above all, we need more high -end GPUs that not from Nvidia.
Team Green’s Blackwell GPU range is the only range of products that includes real high -end options this generation, and it is not surprising that there is practically no stock for Founders Edition cards, given their popularity and their demand.
Although the mid -range of AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT has an incredible $ 599 / £ 569, there are no reference cards, which means that consumers must rely on AIB partner cards sold by retailers – who currently charge more than $ 200 more than the PDSF. You don’t believe me? Take a look at Best Buy.
In this spirit, Intel is potentially the only one on the market that could offer high -end alternatives in the near future: I admit that it is difficult to suggest that one of these GPUs would beat the NVIDIA RTX 5090, but PC players need all the competitors of the industry that we can get.