Despite Intel is already working on next generations of its Intel Arc, it still has pending a long way with the current generation based on Alchemist. Although it has not presented its high-end Intel Arc A750 and A770, Intel is showing it off in interviews and on its own dedicated Intel Arc website, where it has posted new performance data on its Arc A770 compared to the NVIDIA RTX 3060. This time too tell us how the ray tracing technology works in the Intel Arc.
The comparison shows an Intel Arc A770 running at 1080p resolution and ray tracing enabled, where it is up to 14% more powerful on average than the NVIDIA RTX 3060. This is something he said before only this time on graphics compares to Intel Arc A770. Although there are some games where the NVIDIA RTX 3060 surpasses the Intel Arc A770, in general the card of Intel offers better performanceeven with an advantage in some games like Control or Arcadegeddon.
It has also displayed data at 1440p resolution with active ray tracing and its Intel XeSS scaling technology running in two of its available modes, performance and balanced. With this active technology, it has managed to increase the FPS even double in some titles. It should be noted that to obtain such good results in Ghostwire Tokyo they have developed a new BETA driver that offers greater performance.
But all these figures are not much use without the product put up for sale, Intel still has pending the launch of these Intel Arc A770 and A750 in addition to the mid-range A550 and some more entry-level models Intel Arc A3. We wait soon see the new Intel Arc to compete with current generation graphics from NVIDIA and AMD before they decide launch the next generation that surely will have a higher yield than the current one.
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Juan Antonio Soto
I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I gutted my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and a 210MB hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles that I write in Geeknetic. I spend most of my free time playing video games, contemporary and retro, on the more than 20 consoles I have, in addition to the PC.
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