The launch of Intel's Arc Alchemist series draws closer. We don't yet have a clear understanding of how the various cards will compete with their AMD and Nvidia competitors, but hints are emerging, including a new Geekbench 5 OpenCL benchmark for the Arc A770. The A770 is believed to be the flagship of Arc family.
According to the Geekbench 5 submission, (via Benchleaks and Tom's Hardware), the card has 512 compute units, clocked at a maximum frequency of 2400MHz. The memory is reported at 12.7GB, but that could be a reporting error. If we assume that the reported configuration is otherwise accurate, then this is the full ACM-G10 GPU.
OpenCL is a framework for heterogenous computing across different types of processors, including CPUs and GPUs. It's not an indicator of gaming performance, nevertheless, it gives us a peek at what kind of compute performance the card has against its competitors.
The A770 returns an OpenCL score of 85585. This compares to a GeForce RTX 2070 at 85818 and a Radeon RX 6600 XT at 82559. So, that's not exactly a stellar number for the Intel entry. For example, an RTX 3080 scores around 181,000, while a 6800 XT scores 157,000. It means that the A770 as configured is a long way behind high end AMD and Nvidia offerings. It's possible that the Intel 9600K processor used for the Arc result is causing a performance bottleneck.
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Again though, it's important to remember that OpenCL performance isn't reflective of gaming performance. Just look at the 6800 XT and 3080 results above. Though a 3080 holds a
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