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Where to buy Intel Arc A770 and A750

Well it might be better than integrated atleast

Updated: Oct 13, 2022 11:46 am
Where to buy Intel Arc A770 and A750

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Update: Clashing with the RTX 4090, the Intel Arc cards have supposedly launched but with little to no stock except at Newegg in the US.

After a mixed launch of its initial card on the lower end, we are now seeing the launch of the Intel Arc Alchemist GPUs. With the announcement that the Intel Arc A770 and A750 are coming to the shelves for your enjoyment.

Although the series was expected to compete with the RTX 30 and RX 6000 series. However, with its delays, it is now more likely compared to the RTX 4000 series and RDNA 3 set of cards when they come out.

There have been reviews of the cards out now and they do show that it is an edge case. Without the years of support the other main brands have, it can lack in backward compatibility. However, a third competitor is always a good step and we can hope drivers and performance improvements over time.

With that, we look at each choice of card to see where to buy your Intel Arc GPU.

Where to buy Intel Arc A770 US

Links will be updated when the cards become available for purchase

Amazon

Best Buy

Newegg

Where to buy Intel Arc A770 – Canada

Links will be updated when the cards become available for purchase

Amazon

Newegg

Where to buy Intel Arc A770 – UK

Links will be updated when the cards become available for purchase

Amazon

Scan

Overclockers

Ebuyer

Where to buy Intel Arc A750 – US

Links will be updated when the cards become available for purchase

Amazon

Best Buy

Newegg

Where to buy Intel Arc A750 – Canada

Links will be updated when the cards become available for purchase

Amazon

Newegg

Where to buy Intel Arc A750 – UK

Links will be updated when the cards become available for purchase

Amazon

Scan

Overclockers

Ebuyer

Intel Arc release date

Both the Intel Arc A770 and A750 are launching on October 12th. The same day as the RTX 4090 so some difficult competition from the get-go for the small blue team.

Intel Arc A770 specifications

The flagship of the lineup, the Intel Arc A770 is the DG2-512. As well as is the ACM-G10 variant and the Alchemist card are made with TSMCs 6nm process. Making a die 406mm² in size with 21.7 billion transistors. It uses the PCIe 4.0 x16 interface as all current cards still are and do not fulfill the whole bandwidth of them.

In the core, you’ll find 32 Xe cores with 8 render slices and 32 ray tracing units. There are also 512 Xe vector engines that clock at 2,100 MHz. The memory is 16GB of GDDR6 clocked at 17.5 Gbps across a 256-bit bus giving a bandwidth of 560 GB/s. All of these come with a 225W board power, somewhat more tame than the new expected cards.

Intel Arc A750 specifications

Slightly behind that card, you have the Arc A750, also on the DG2-512 GPU and ACM-G10 variant. This means the cores are the same as the flagship with TSMC 6nm process and 406mm² die size and 21.7 billion transistors.

However, where it cuts down is the GPU specs. With now 28 Xe cores, 7 render slices, and 28 ray tracing units. Whilst also having 448 matrices and engines. These are clocked at 2,050 MHz and draw power of 225W as well. Memory is also cut down to 8 GB of GDDR6, clocked at 16 Gbps across a 256-bit bus giving a bandwidth of 512 GB/s.

Intel Arc A380

The first of the Intel Arc Alchemist GPUs to launch a few months ago. After an exclusive launch in China, you can now buy an Intel Arc A380 on Newegg.

It was a long time coming, with many delays and staggering, and it has only now come out in a silent manner. Although the reviews of the card show it doesn’t quite bring it to the RX 6400 or GTX 1650.

The particular model on sale is the ASRock Challenger Arc A380 ITX. So a compact choice, but the first to be offered outside China.

If you are planning on buying it, it will cost you $139.99. And it is a different model from the GUNNIR Photon which was the first one to come out.

So although it might not be up there with the performance you can save some money on buying it and running it. And it can be better than integrated at least so you might be able to appreciate that.

ASRock Challenger Arc A380 ITX

ASRock Challenger Arc A380

Core Clock Speed

2250 MHz base, 2450 MHz boost

Cores

1,024

Memory Size

6GB GDDR6

Dimensions

190 x 124 x 39 mm (7.5″ x 4.9″ x 1.5″)

PSU Required

500 W

TDP

75 W

ASRock Challenger A380 ITX specifications

Looking at the newly released card you may be wondering what it actually holds. It is based upon a DG2-128 GPU and uses the ACM-G10 variant.

To create its chips, Intel does outsource the production. And so utilizes the TSMC 6nm process, creating a 157mm² die size with 7.2 billion transistors.

It comes with 8 Xe cores, which brings 1,024 shading units with it. Along with 64 TMUs, 32 ROPs, 128 EUs, 8 RT cores, and 4 MB of an L2 cache.

These are clocked to a base clock of 2,250MHz, a 13% improvement over the standard 2GHz. Whilst being able to boost up to 2,450MHz. Closer to the speeds Radeon cards can achieve.

For its VRAM, it has on it 6GB of GDDR6 memory. It is clocked at 15.5 Gbps across a 96-bit bus creating a bandwidth of 186 GB/s.

ASRock Arc A380 ITX on Newegg

Intel Arc FAQs

How much will Intel Arc cost?

The Intel Arc cards have a range of MSRPs for the three GPUs. The A380 comes with a launch price of $149 USD. A750 will set you back $289 USD whilst the A770 is $329 USD.

What is Intel Arc GPU?

Intel Arc GPU is Intel’s brand of discrete graphics cards it is releasing slowly. The first series is Alchemist and one card has been released in China. The A380 release was exclusive to China, but now one model has popped up on Newegg USA. It aims to disrupt the duopoly of the current graphics card market and offer better pricing in the rising costs.

Now the flagship and secondary cards are launching there is more potential in them. Although overshadowed by the giants it is the start of a marathon of product development down the line.


With a background in engineering and PC gaming, Seb is a staff writer with a focus on GPU, storage, and power supplies. Also one of tech supports in the office he likes helping and solving problems.

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