Quote from: Preach on September 24, 2024, 11:47:58Quote from: Hotz on September 24, 2024, 10:20:51you still only get XE1 graphics, which are not competitive to current AMD
I really dislike this argument. As if it matters. Current AMD igpus in today's heavy games are already dropping to like 18 FPS. Yes, Intel's are probably worse and get like 9 fps but it's not like your gonna game on either anyway, so who cares.
AMD also uses absolutely tiny CU igpu's on their desktop line but I've yet to hear cries of foul play from the haters.
And I really dislike your argument. Because the iGPU matters to anyone who's buying a Mini PC, or Notebook without dGPU, small form factor PCs (like AsRock Deskmini), or Mini ITX builds (like InWin Chopin).
And there's lots of people who are interested in these small devices, and not in fu-cking ugly oversized PC towers anymore, which are absolutely overkill. Even when checking the infamous ETA Prime channel you can see at the amount of subscribers and comments that the interest for such small devices is huge.
For these people it doesn't matter if they can play games at 4K in Ultrahigh resolution, but they still care to have a capable iGPU for casual gaming and video editing. So the iGPU does matter a lot to them.
About "AMDs tiny iGPU" on desktop: apart from their 9000x desktop CPU, which has in fact a very tiny iGPU they also offer the 8000G desktop series, which is the same big iGPU as the mobile 780m. So of course no one would hate on them.
On Intel's side however, it looks like they have a good iGPU in their hands (XE2), but holding it back for anything except a subordinate product segment (ultra-low-power-laptops), while their main product line (Arrow Lake, which is confirmed to cover all platforms from mobile to desktop) gets an outdated iGPU. For the next 2 years... allegedly... which is odd to say the least.