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Battlemage may refer to: Lichdom: Battlemage, a role-playing video game; Magic The Gathering: Battlemage, a strategy-oriented video game; Battlemage, the codename for the GPU architecture branded as Intel Xe 2
Battlemage (X e 2) is the second-generation X e architecture that debuted with its low power variant in Lunar Lake mobile processors that released in September 2024. [25] On December 3, 2024, Intel announced two Arc B-Series desktop graphics cards based on the X e 2-HPG graphics architecture.
Overview of Intel Arc Battlemage GPUs Branding and Model [1] Released MSRP (USD) Code name Transistors (billion) Die size (mm 2) Core Cache Memory Fillrate [a] [b] Processing power TDP Bus interface Config [c] Clock [d] L1 L2 Type Size Clock rate (Gb/s) Band-width (GB/s) Bus width Pixel (Gpx/s) Texture (Gtex/s) Half precision (base) Single ...
Magic: The Gathering: BattleMage is a real time strategy game published in January 1997 by Acclaim for both PCs and PlayStation. It was also in development for the Sega Saturn , but this version was cancelled in mid-1997.
On November 11, 2020 Intel launched the H3C XG310 data center GPU consisting of four DG1 GPUs with 32 GB of LPDDR4X memory on a single-slot PCIe card. [50] [51] Each GPU is connected to 8 GB of memory over a 128-bit bus and the card uses a PCIe 3.0 x16 connection to the rest of the system. The GPUs use the Xe-LP (Gen 12.1) architecture.
Magic: The Gathering: BattleMage is a real time strategy game published in January 1997 by Acclaim for both PCs and PlayStation. It was also in development for the Sega Saturn, but this version was cancelled in mid-1997. [1] In addition to the real time strategy game, BattleMage has a head-to-head mode. [2]
Lichdom: Battlemage is a first-person action role-playing video game that was developed by independent American game developer Xaviant and published by Maximum Games for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, running on the CryEngine 3 game engine. [1]
Blackwell is a graphics processing unit (GPU) microarchitecture developed by Nvidia as the successor to the Hopper and Ada Lovelace microarchitectures.. Named after statistician and mathematician David Blackwell, the name of the Blackwell architecture was leaked in 2022 with the B40 and B100 accelerators being confirmed in October 2023 with an official Nvidia roadmap shown during an investors ...