Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Intel has some major overclocking news about its upcoming Arc graphics cards

Add as a preferred source on Google

Last week, Intel announced its new Intel Arc brand for discrete enthusiast graphics, its new XeSS upscaling technology, and the code names for its next four generations of gaming graphics cards. In a blog post recapping the week, Roger Chandler, vice president and general manager of Client Graphics Products at Intel, revealed that Arc drivers will come with a built-in overclocking utility.

Currently, AMD provides an overclocking tool in its Radeon Software, but Nvidia doesn’t. There is a laundry list of GPU overclocking tools, many of which are better than the one available in Radeon Software. Still, having access to sliders to allow you to dial in a quick overclock can increase your GPU performance without much hassle.

LEDs forming a graphics card.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Although Intel revealed that Arc drivers will have an overclocking utility, the blog post didn’t say much else about it. “We’re even integrating overclocking controls into the driver UI to give enthusiasts the tools they need to push the hardware to the limit,” according to the post’s only comments on the matter.

Recommended Videos

Ideally, we’d like to see presets that are tuned for whichever card is installed in the system, as well as manual controls for enthusiasts who want to dial in their own overclock. A built-in benchmark or stress test would be nice, too, allowing you to quickly check your overclocking settings without opening another application.

Hopefully, we’ll know more about the utility soon. Intel also pointed out that it has been working with Microsoft on DirectX 12 Ultimate, adding support for ray tracing, variable rate shading, and mesh shading for Intel Arc cards. Drivers are almost as important the hardware itself, so they’ll play a critical role in how successful Intel Arc cards are.

The first generation of Intel Arc cards, code-named Alchemist, are set to arrive in early 2022. These cards use the Xe-HPG architecture, which includes dedicated ray tracing cores and Xe Matrix Execution (XMX) units. The XMX units accelerate machine learning, allowing Intel Arc cards to use things like the A.I.-assisted XeSS upscaling feature.

Although Intel hasn’t revealed specs or even hinted at performance, a teaser video showed games like Metro Exodus, Days Gone, and Crysis Remastered running on preproduction silicon. At the very least, the cards look capable of running recent AAA games, but we’ll need to wait to see how well they can run those games.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Google just made Gemini for Home a lot better at running your smart home
Google just updated Gemini for Home with smarter features and faster controls.
Google-gemini-for-home-updates

If you have a Google smart display or speaker at home, there are new updates you should know about. Google has rolled out a fresh batch of improvements to Gemini for Home, making the assistant noticeably smarter and faster across smart speakers and displays.

Gemini for Home is getting smarter and more personal

Read more
AI voice chats still feel awkward because assistants don’t know when to talk
Thinking Machines Lab is testing faster full duplex AI that can listen and respond at the same time
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Thinking Machines Lab says it’s building full duplex AI, which means an AI system can take in what someone is saying while generating a response. In plain English, it’s closer to a phone call than a walkie-talkie.

The startup, founded last year by former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati, announced interaction models, starting with TML-Interaction-Small. It says the system can respond in 0.40 seconds, a pace that puts it near ordinary human back-and-forth.

Read more
Claude just took over the data center Grok needed most
Anthropic’s SpaceX deal exposes the brutal compute math behind Musk’s fight to catch AI rivals.
Grok

SpaceX is leasing the full capacity of its Colossus 1 data center in Memphis, Tennessee, to Anthropic, giving the Claude maker a sudden infrastructure windfall while xAI’s Grok fights for ground in the AI race.

The early May 2026 agreement, reported by the Wall Street Journal, gives Anthropic access to more than 220,000 Nvidia GPUs and over 300 megawatts of processing power. That’s the kind of xAI compute edge Musk’s chatbot business would normally want nearby.

Read more