![]() ![]() I was also able to hit 74 fps while playing Halo Infinite in 1440p with all of the graphics settings maxed out. The A750 scored over 900 more points than the 3060 Ti in the 3DMark Time Spy Extreme benchmark, landing just above the the RTX 3070. I figured the beefier Arc A770 would outmatch the RTX 3060 Ti (I didn't have a chance to review the 3060 at launch), but I was genuinely surprised by how well both cards faired in our benchmarks. (I typically saw them hit around 76C under heavy load, six degrees more than NVIDIA's card.) Both cards have a 225W TDP, which means they will end up drawing more power and heat than the 170W RTX 3060. The A770 doubles that memory and has more power across the board: 32 Xe cores and ray tracing units, as well as a 2.1 GHz speed. The Arc A750 features 28 Xe cores, 28 ray tracing units, a 2,050 MHz clock speed and 8GB of GDDR6 RAM. Powering these beauties is the latest evolution of Intel's "Alchemist" Xe graphics architecture. They're more like stealth bombers built with the express purpose of obliterating NVIDIA and AMD's price-performance ratios. These certainly don't feel like Intel's first consumer graphics cards. They're well-built, have a finger print-free matte finish, and aside from the modest LEDs around the A770's fans, there's no annoying bling in sight. After testing Intel's recent NUC Extreme systems, I was expecting some fairly practical-yet-dull gamer chic. I was impressed the moment I opened the Arc A750 and A770 boards sent for review. ![]()
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