- Intel has advertised Xess 3-upscaling and Xess Multi-frame generation
- Its roof on MFG will work with older GPUs – even XE1 -Integrated Graphics
- This is a big advantage over Nvidia’s MFG, and with Panther Lake Chips due to 2026 arriving, there are exciting opportunities on the horizon
Intel has taken the wrapping of his next generation Xess Tech to increase image velocities with his ARC (and XE) GPUs, and Team Blue follows in Nvidia’s footsteps with its own takeover of Multi-Frame Generation (MFG).
Videocardz reports that Intel advertised Xess 3-upscaling and Xess-MFG, which facilitates interpolating multiple frameworks, which means the feature inserts several AI-generated frames between the (real) frames reproduced by GPU.
Of course, this increases artificial image velocity, and Xess-MFG will offer up to 4x framework generation (meaning three AI frames for each real, quadrupled the image frequency).
Welcome twist with Intel’s MFG Tech is that it will be backward compatible with older ARC GPUs, which means ARC alkymist -1. -Gen -desktop -Grafik card -and XE2 -Itegrated GPUs (and finally also XE1).
No release date for Xess 3 Plus MFG was revealed, but it is expected to debut next year.
Analysis: Make Panther Sprint faster
To be more accurate, Xess 3 with MFG is expected to be part of Intel’s magnificent plan to pure up mobile CPUs with Panther Lake. These Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors for laptops (and handhelds) will see “Broad Market Availability from January 2026”, Intel also told us in a press release.
So Panther Lake with integrated XE3 graphics is already expected to ‘set a new standard’ and give over 50% faster graphics performance compared to the XE2 – a big leap, and one that can be made an even bigger jump when you throw frame generation in the equation (with supported games, that is,).
In short, next year we could see some very convincing wallet-friendly game-bearable computers packing Intel chips with seriously powerful integrated GPUs (not to mention fast thin-and-light-game notes and peppy handheld).
Intel also claims a remarkable performance, as it will be the first GPU producer to allow previous generations of its graphics card to use MFG – NVIDIA is the only company that offers MFG right now, but the feature remains exclusive for its latest RTX 5000 GPUs.
AMD has framework generation, but has not entered the multi-frame generational race yet it is expected to do so with its next generation of the FSR code name ‘Redstone’.



