- Tip in drivers suggest that Intel is working with multi-frame generation for its GPUs
- This is coming at the same time as bow B770 GPU -The rumors floating around again
- It is a further indication that Intel does not give up its desktop GPUs after the NVIDIA agreement
Nvidia leads the race on the graphics card market and spices a lot of the top rankings on our list of the best GPUs out there – and Intel could take a page out of Nvidia’s Playbook for his ARC Desktop GPUs.
As reported by Videocardz, a Redditor clash in driver files suggested that Intel could be ready to introduce Xess ‘Multi-Frame Generation’. There is text that explicitly mentions the feature along with an unidentified logo, but obviously this is far from confirmation that Team Blue is planning a rival system for NVIDIA’s MFG.
It is also worth noting that Intel has a rumored ARC B770 GPU on the horizon, with a handful of leaks indicating that Team Blue is hard to work on this top -end battlemage graphics card that could pack 16 GB VRAM -and if it is real, Team Blue’s strongest GPU offer would.
Recent computer science files are pointing to this GPU’s existence (also reported by Videocardz), and working on the Arc Desktop Graphics card appears to be up and running despite the recent huge NVIDIA agreement that Intel has made. So, given all that, it is not long-term to think that Team Blue could work on the multi-frame generation to speed up image speeds with its discreet arc products.
Besides the NVIDIA RTX 5000 series and the lossless scaling tool on Steam, there is no other way to take advantage of the multi -frame generation at the moment -so it should be interesting to see if Intel is actually planning to open another option.
Analysis: If this is legitimate
Following the announcement of NVIDIA and Intel’s partnership, I noticed a certain level of concern online among players that Intel may have shifted his focus away from Arc Desktop GPUs. And while this tip, like this multi -frame -tip, seems to suggest hope for the future -it is possible that it could have been in the works long before the NVIDIA collaboration was announced. Only time will show.
If Intel has a battlemage GPU with 16 GB of VRAM in the wings, as well as multi-frame generation technology to back up it, it could mean Team Blue climb a step in the GPU race against NVIDIA and AMD.
Intel could make an even stronger case if it throws the rumored B770 GPU as another affordable option, similar to Team Red’s Radeon RX 9070 XT from earlier this year. There is no doubt in my mind that cheaper pricing will win fans over – but both this graphics card and the MFG Support just remain rumored for now.



