If you thought Intel's Arc Alchemist lineup was be all sewn up by now, one year on from the release of the Arc A770 and Arc A750, surprise! Intel has a brand new budget graphics card: the Arc A580.
The Arc A580 sits in the middle of Intel's existing GPU stack; above the A380 that you definitely forgot about and below the A770 and A750. In terms of speeds and feeds, the A580 features the same G10 GPU as the two A7-series cards, though comes with fewer Xe-cores.
We're talking 24 Xe-cores, four fewer than the Arc A750. That also makes for 24 Ray Tracing Units, and yes, that does mean this sub-$200 card is able to accelerate ray tracing in-game. I probably wouldn't opt to turn many ray-traced effects on, however, the performance hit on a budget 1080p card like this is sure to be pretty significant.
The A580 comes with a noteworthy memory configuration for this price: 8GB of GDDR6 across a 256-bit memory bus. That's bandwidth of 512GB/s for a sub-$200 graphics card, matching the Arc A750, and raising the bar for budget graphics cards. Nvidia, eat your heart out.
Unfortunately, our review model is still yet to arrive, so I can't yet report our own performance figures. Intel has provided some benchmarks for this card for a rough idea, however. Make of them what you like.
As with all Intel Alchemist graphics cards, you can expect higher frame rates versus the competition when playing DX12 or Vulkan games—two up-to-date graphics APIs. On older APIs, like DX11, AMD's RX 6600 and Nvidia's RTX 3050 tend to pull a lead on the A580.
Though there's a big asterisk next to all of these figures: you need to be able to enable Resize BAR to get the most of this card, which is true of any Alchemist GPU.
Also note these are last-gen cards
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