Battlemage lives: Intel announce the Arc B580 and B570 graphics cards

1440p-minded GPUs launch from December, both under $250

Image credit: Intel

Well slap my backplate and call me CUDA, because not only are Intelā€™s Arc Battlemage graphics cards not dead ā€“ having once been mired in production trouble rumours ā€“ but theyā€™ve got names and are out from next week. The CPU makersā€™ second batch of dedicated gaming GPUs (following the decent budget-end Alchemist series) will comprise the Arc B580, releasing December 13th at $249, and the Arc B570, which arrives on January 16th from $219.

These prices tell us that Battlemage will, as Alchemist did, attempt to bite into the sub-$250 slice of gaming GPU market share pie that Nvidia and AMD seem content to leave uneaten. This time, however, Intel say theyā€™re aiming for speedy 1440p play, which would suggest a huge performance upgrade over 1080p-focused Alchemist models like the Arc A750. “Best-in-class performance-per-dollar”, no less, according to the marketing bumf.

To that end, the Arc B580 and Arc B570 will come packing more VRAM ā€“ 12GB and 10GB respectively ā€“ and support for XeSS 2. This is new version of Intelā€™s upscaler that includes a DLSS 3/FSR 3-style frame generation feature, generating inserting interpolated frames “using optical flow and motion vector reprojection”. Nice? I think? With all the bells and whistles running, XeSS 2 can supposedly multiply framerate output by by 3.9x, though Iā€™d wait to see this in action before slapping down money for a pre-order. Democratising the advantages of frame generation is a noble goal in the face of Nvidia keeping DLSS 3 support for only its latest RTX 40 series GPUs, but FSR 3 has never quite matched it on visual quality or input lag management. Thus, grudgingly, we must accept some truth in the idea that frame gen needs very specific, cutting-edge hardware to work comfortably.

Image credit: Intel

Anyway, Iā€™m more interested in straight-up, traditionally rendered framerates, and specifically whether Intel really can pull off a proper 60fps@1440p card ā€“ or two ā€“ at such a low price. Or, as we would have said in 2016 or so, a price. The last few years have seen GPU costs rise, yet the GPU themselves sometimes struggling to keep up with the ever-increasing demands of high fidelity games, to the extent that you can easily end up dropping Ā£500/$500 or more to get a truly capable Quad HD engine. We probably canā€™t expect the Arc B580 to knock the RTX 4070 Super off its premium perch, but given the dearth of compelling options in the lower budget ranges, Iā€™m certainly willing to watch it take a shot.

In other graphics card news, Nvidia are widely expected to reveal the GeForce RTX 5090 at Las Vegasā€™ CES show in early January. It will probably cost more than $219. Just a bit.

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