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Something to look forward to: With Intel's second generation of discrete graphics cards just days from launch, Geekbench leaks are starting to put the company's performance claims to the test. Early reports suggest the Arc B580's performance is comparable to existing mid-range competitors, but detailed analysis from TechSpot and other outlets will paint a more complete picture.
Early Geekbench results suggest that Intel's upcoming Arc B580 graphics card performs roughly on par with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 and AMD Radeon RX 7600 XT. While the initial benchmarks fall slightly short of Intel's projections, the full picture may not become clear until the card is widely tested in real-world scenarios.
Tested on a system equipped with an Intel Core Ultra 9 258K processor and 48GB of DDR5 RAM, the Arc B580 achieved an OpenCL score of 98,343 and a Vulkan score of 103,445. These results place it in the same performance range as the RTX 4060 and RX 7600 XT. However, relying on only two benchmark tests leaves out other critical aspects of performance that could emerge once the card is in broader use.
Testing the Arc B580 alongside a high-end CPU and 48GB of RAM likely allowed the card to perform at its peak potential, whereas the Nvidia and AMD benchmarks account for a wider range of system configurations. As a $250 mid-range product, the B580 will likely be paired with mainstream CPUs and more modest memory setups in typical use cases.
However, synthetic benchmarks like Geekbench only tell part of the story. Real-world game-specific benchmarks, which are absent from both Geekbench and Intel's promotional materials, will provide a clearer picture of the card's true capabilities.
Intel claims the B580 delivers the best value in the mainstream GPU market, estimating its raster performance to exceed the RTX 4060 by 32 percent and the RX 7600 by 26 percent. These projections are significantly more optimistic than the recent Geekbench results suggest.
That said, the third-party tests do not specify which drivers were used, a critical detail given Arc's history of driver-related performance challenges and subsequent significant improvements. Additionally, Geekbench benchmarks omit ray tracing performance, where Intel claims the B580 outperforms the RTX 4060 by 25 percent and the RX 7600 by 37 percent.
While the B580 debuts as an aggressive value proposition – undercutting the RTX 4060 and RX 7600 by approximately $50 and offering significantly more VRAM – its competitive edge may be short-lived.
Nvidia and AMD are expected to reveal their next-generation GPUs at CES in January. AMD's RX 8000 series will primarily target the mainstream sector, competing directly with the B580, while Nvidia's RTX 5000 lineup will begin with enthusiast-level cards, followed by mid-range options. However, early rumors suggest the RTX 5060 may include only 8GB of VRAM compared to the B580's 12GB, potentially limiting its performance in high-resolution scenarios.