It's official. As of June 20th, the Intel-made Arc A770 is history, an ex graphics card. Intel has released a PCN or Product Change Notification for the card. The «key characteristics» of this change? «Product discontinuance». Yikes.
The notice (currently at the top of Intel's PCN list) says that June 20th was the final date for both orders and shipments. It's basically giving all Intel's customers the heads up that it will no longer be taking orders for Intel-made Arc A770 cards and likewise the last shipments have gone out.
«Customers» in this case means distributors, retailers and other larger entities, given Intel doesn't sell graphics cards direct to gamers.
The main thing to note here is that this «End of life» notice pertains only to Intel-made Arc A770 16GB cards (Intel doesn't make any 8GB versions itself). It does not mean that cards made by third parties, otherwise known as AIB or Add-in Board cards, have also been cancelled and that the A770 as a GPU is dead.
Of course, it is possible that's what Intel has planned. But that's not what this cancellation notice means. And there are, in fact, good reasons to believe that the A770 very much isn't slated for imminent cancellation.
For starters, several AIB makers including Acer offer cards based on the Arc A770. What's more, Sparkle recently announced its own new line of Arc-based boards, including a range-topping A770 Titan.
That announcement came in early June, so it would be a bit odd if the A770 was entirely cancelled just a few weeks later.
Best CPU for gaming: The top chips from Intel and AMDBest gaming motherboard: The right boardsBest graphics card: Your perfect pixel-pusher awaitsBest SSD for gaming: Get into the game ahead of the rest
Moreover, we're
Read more on pcgamer.com