Intel has reportedly canceled its high-end Xe2-based Arc Battlemage "BMG-G31" GPUs which were going to be used in gaming graphics cards.
|
Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus March 31, 12:22 AM
|
Intel has reportedly canceled its high-end Xe2-based Arc Battlemage "BMG-G31" GPUs which were going to be used in gaming graphics cards, has decided to NOT Compete In The High-End Gaming Segment Intel has stated its commitment towards the discrete GPU segment, but will continue to make "Strategic Investments" within the platform. Based on the latest report by reliable insider and leaker, @Jaykihn0, it looks like the company has significantly altered its discrete GPU plans. It is said that the high-end Battlemage BMG-G31 GPU is more or less dead and that has been the case since Q3 of 2024. The BMG-G31 GPU die was supposed to be bigger than the G21 featured on the B580 and B570 graphics cards. It was reportedly going to feature around 24-32 Xe2 cores with a 256-bit memory bus and 16 GB of GDDR6 memory. It is also mentioned that there's currently no update on the Celestial "Xe3" discrete GPU lineup. The Xe3 architecture will be deployed in the next-gen Panther Lake CPUs that are being fabricated on the Intel 18A process node, but that's an integrated solution. Whether we will get a Celestial "Xe3" GPU for discrete use remains to be seen. With the Arc B580 and Arc B570, Intel has provided strong value in a segment where NVIDIA and AMD currently have no new options. Battlemage also proves itself to be an impressive solution for integrated graphics and competes well against AMD's latest RDNA 3.5 offerings. Although we would love to see a high-end Battlemage graphics card, it looks like the company is going to focus its GPU efforts on the integrated sides a bit more but will continue to provide gamers with some decent value-oriented products, such as its recent launches.