
Yet our time with both Arc-branded GPUs has been like picking through a box of unlabeled chocolates. The best results are trained on modern and future rendering APIs, and in those gaming scenarios, their power and performance exceed their price points. In great news, Intel is taking the GPU market seriously with how its Arc A770 (starting at $329) and Arc A750 (starting at $289) cards are architected.

While this is a fantastic first-generation stab at an established market, it’s still a first-generation stab. Without firm answers from Intel on how many units it's making, we’re left wondering what kind of Arc GPU sell-outs to expect until further notice.) (Sadly, limited stock remains a concern in modern GPU reviews.

If those factors continue to move in consumer-friendly directions, it will mean that people might actually get to buy and enjoy the best parts of Intel’s new A700-series graphics cards. Intel now has a series of GPUs entering the PC gaming market just in time for a few major industry trends to play out: some easing in the supply chain, some crashes in cryptocurrency markets, and more GPUs being sold near their originally announced MSRPs. That last question is easy to answer: yes, and pretty well.

Further Reading Rumors, delays, and early testing suggest Intel’s Arc GPUs are on shaky ground
