Intel Announces Availability of Arc A750 and A770 GPUs, Starting at $289 and $329, Respectively

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Image: Intel

Intel has announced that its Arc A750 and A770 GPUs are now available for purchase at select retailers. Users in the U.S. can find them at Micro Center locations (Dallas, TX, Chicago, IL, Houston, TX, Westbury, NY, Denver, CO, and Overland Park, KS) and Newegg, with the latter offering Intel’s limited-edition A750 and A770 graphics cards for $289.99 and $349.99, respectively. Both are out of stock at the time of this posting “because of high demand,” as noted in the A770 listing, but remain available for backorder. The ASRock Phantom Gaming Arc A770 has also been listed for $329.99.

Intel Arc A750 Limited Edition

  • 8GB 256-Bit GDDR6
  • Core Clock 2050
  • 1x HDMI 2.1 4x DisplayPort 2.0
  • PCI Express 4.0 x16

Intel Arc A770 Limited Edition

  • 16GB 256-Bit GDDR6
  • Core Clock 2100
  • 1x HDMI 2.1 4x DisplayPort 2.0
  • PCI Express 4.0 x16

From the Intel Arc website:

They’re finally here! The Intel Arc A750 and A770 GPUs officially launch today, October 12th in select markets. Everyone at Intel is beyond thrilled to get graphics cards with modern features and extremely competitive performance-per-dollar into your hands. Plus you get a lot of great gaming content with the Intel Arc A750 and A770 Graphics Cards! Gamers get Call of Duty: Modern Warfare II on Battle.net with purchase of qualifying Intel Arc 5 and 7 graphics cards and systems.

And by registering with Intel Gaming Access, Intel’s community engagement platform, users also get access to Gotham Knights, Ghostbusters: Spirits Unleashed, and The Settlers with qualifying purchase.

Bringing back balance to the GPU market is a commitment which we’ve talked at length about. Sharing Intel Arc gaming performance, overclocking, and advanced features like real-time ray tracing and XeSS upscaling, have been big steps on our journey to bring competition to the graphics market and now you can experience it yourself.

As indicated by their relatively low pricing, one of Intel’s goals with Arc graphics is to bring “balance back to the GPU market,” a segment that continues to see pricier and pricier products. The GPUs feature support for AI super sampling via XeSS, includes dedicated hardware for ray tracing, and are the first GPUs to offer hardware AV1 encode acceleration, according to Intel.

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Discussion (10 replies)

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Brian_B
Brian_B 👍 1

I'm more excited about these than I am the 4090 to be honest.

But that's a very, very low bar.

T

Can Ryan and Tom survive the incoming Intel layoffs?

G

"THUMPer, post: 61085, member: 111" wrote:

Can Ryan and Tom survive the incoming Intel layoffs?


What about the ex- owner?! ?

Elf_Boy

Nice to see the gpu's out.

I see them as a good first entry into the market. Dont want to pull a Matrox (release the best gpu of the day and disappear).

This will let Intel work on driver and optimization issues while cooking up some high end parts. At least that is what I hope will happen.

Space_Ranger
Space_Ranger 👍 2

"GunShot, post: 61092, member: 1790" wrote:

What about the ex- owner?! ?


To my knowledge, he's not with Intel anymore. Something about needing to take time to take care of his family. I hope he's ok but I don't believe he's there anymore.

T
THUMPer 👍 4

Yeah he's not with intel anymore. I think that only lasted a few months.

DrezKill

"Space_Ranger, post: 61094, member: 52" wrote:

To my knowledge, he's not with Intel anymore. Something about needing to take time to take care of his family. I hope he's ok but I don't believe he's there anymore.


"THUMPer, post: 61096, member: 111" wrote:

Yeah he's not with intel anymore. I think that only lasted a few months.


Yeah if I recall correctly, Kyle was not able to relocate himself and his family for the new Intel job, so yeah his time with Intel was quite short.

T
Tempest 👍 2

The text below "rom the Intel Arc website" in the article appears in all caps to me. I've recently noticed this in other FPS articles too. It occurs inside a "blockquote" element: <blockquote class="wp-block-quote">.

The site makes very heavy use of JS/CSS, which I've made no attempt to debug, except to observe that changing the value of the "text-transform" property from "uppercase" in the following rule resolves the issue:
.tagdiv-type blockquote p {
font-family:'Roboto',sans-serif;
font-size:32px;
line-height:40px;
font-weight:400;
text-transform:uppercase;
color:#4db2ec;
word-wrap:break-word
}

I'm mentioning the issue here where others have a better chance of reading it. I'm on the latest Firefox ESR. I'm curious whether others are having the same experience. It's easy enough to work around and not a big deal to me, but I'd hate to see new visitors scared away because of a glitch in a stylesheet, if that's indeed the cause.

DrezKill
DrezKill 👍 2

"Tempest, post: 61248, member: 5189" wrote:

The text below "rom the Intel Arc website" in the article appears in all caps to me. I've recently noticed this in other FPS articles too.


Same to both.

"Tempest, post: 61248, member: 5189" wrote:

I'm curious whether others are having the same experience.


Yupz.

I'm on Firefox version 105.0.3.

Brian_B
Brian_B 👍 2

Same, Chrome Version 106.0.5249.119 (Official Build) (64-bit)

Tsing Mui
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