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Intel's Arc "Battlemage" B770 Expected Next Quarter, Possible Details at Computex 2025

AleksandarK

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Intel appears ready to broaden its Arc "Battlemage" lineup with a new, more powerful desktop graphics card likely to be called the Arc B770, potentially arriving as soon as next quarter. Until now, Team Blue has introduced only two Xe2 Battlemage models, the B570 (10 GB) and B580 (12 GB), both of which earned praise for solid performance at accessible price points. Enthusiasts have long speculated about successors like the B750, B770, and even a B780, but Intel shifted its public focus to upcoming AI PC processors after the B570 launch, leaving GPU fans uncertain which designs would materialize. Recent shipping manifests uncovered a "BMG‑G31" GPU die en route to Intel's Vietnam assembly plant, the same site that produced limited‑edition B570 and B580 cards, while insider Haze2K1's documents hint at a "B7XX" special‑edition series. Simultaneously, chatter about a 24 GB Developer Edition based on the earlier BMG‑G21 die suggests Intel is also eyeing workstation and creative‑professional markets.

A well-known tipster, OneRaichu, has further fueled excitement by reporting that the Arc B770 could pack between 24 and 32 Xe2 compute units, a 256‑bit memory interface, and 16 GB of GDDR6, positioning it squarely against rival xx60‑series models and promising a meaningful boost in gaming and compute workloads. Beyond Battlemage, Intel's next‑generation graphics architecture, Xe3 "Celestial," has reached pre‑silicon validation. According to Intel engineer Tom Petersen and corroborating industry leaks, Celestial's core media engines, Xe cores, XMX matrix units, and ray‑tracing hardware are fully designed and are now being tested in a hardware model to fine‑tune power consumption and clock speeds. With Computex 2025 kicking off in late May, Intel may at last clarify both its high‑end Battlemage refresh and the broader Celestial roadmap, potentially reshaping competition in the mainstream and next‑generation GPU markets.



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Would have said it's too little too late. But I guess if they can undercut AMD 9060 series on price and perform atleast 20% - 30% better then they have a winner.
 
A bit too late, imo. Also, is it going to be available, or is it just another paper launch like every other Intel Arc release so far?
 
bit odd timing but yeah, if they would just price this extremely competitiely and drop the price on the others to be more competitive, heck I might just pick one up, or two....but lets be honest, Intel wont do that.
 
hope that card to fight 4070 for less 500.
 
It goes without saying that we benefit from more competition in the GPU market.

I have been pleasantly surprised by the ARC B570/580 (despite availability issues) and have standardized on the ARC B570 for office productivity dGPU.

The first generation ARC by comparison was something of a rotten egg, the only interesting model being the Matrox passively cooled A310 (ruined by $500 price and six week lead time).
 
All y'all bashing on the A series, do / did you own one and use it for any significant length of time? My sister has been using an A770 16GB (paired with a i5-12600k) for a year now, excellent performance at 1080p and the only game that is unplayable is Tomb Raider anniversary, which is a buggy mess anyway. I'll admit Intel can take a few weeks to get drivers right for new games (so do red & green teams these days), but based on my experience this comment section is way too hard on the A series.
 
That's the B570 (a card that costs £220), not the B750.


You can in the UK, too, if you're lucky to find one.
You can pick up at least 4 different B580`s at overclockers which are in stock. Ranging from the Intel ARC for £289.99 to the Acer Nitro OC for £269.99. The 3 fan Sparkle Luna OC is even cheaper at £259.99.

This new card could well be very interesting, lets hope Intel deliver...
 
You can pick up at least 4 different B580`s at overclockers which are in stock. Ranging from the Intel ARC for £289.99 to the Acer Nitro OC for £269.99. The 3 fan Sparkle Luna OC is even cheaper at £259.99.
Good to know. :) I'm actually quite tempted to get the Intel reference as an upgrade for my HTPC. Only that I don't need it (just want it). :laugh:
 
Extremely late to market...
 
it's not like anyone can get anything else, so it will be right on time.
It's not like you'll be able to get this one, either.
 
The A770 impressed, and that was on Alchemist. Damn good video production card, and pretty decent at gaming, once the drivers were ironed out. Given the impressive performance of the 'entry level' B500 series, I'm excited to see how the architecture scales up. I might lose personal interest depending on its behavior in VR applications, but it's in a good spot to catch up with the 9060XT/5060Ti. LP B300-series cards would also be nice. I had a certain love for the little budget workhorse the A380 turned out to be, and lord knows we need a better option than the 3050 6GB.
 
Lets go if performance for B770 is 4070 Super Ti duper 420 blazde cactus and 7900 between gre/xt, then golden gpu.

And price for 350-400 {:
 
Lets go if performance for B770 is 4070 Super Ti duper 420 blazde cactus and 7900 between gre/xt, then golden gpu.

And price for 350-400 {:
That seems a bit unrealistic, maybe 4070 level / 50%ish upgrade from the B580 and $400. That would be killer value when the first 4070 that pcpartpicker shows as in stock is $800.
 
I'd be interested in these models of cards but will wait for official reviews & testing before calling it. My current A750 factory OC card does well with video production, but that's all I use it for atm.
 
When prices are inflated by 30% on shelves across all brands, nothing is "too little too late" my friends. Anything alleviating top low to mid-range helps unclogging the situation.
 
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