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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 ...
Lunar Lake's GPU features second generation X e 2-LPG cores based on the Battlemage graphics architecture. The Battlemage architecture launched in Lunar Lake mobile processors before discrete Arc desktop graphics cards. It contains eight X e 2-LPG cores that share an 8 MB L2 cache. The GPU is able to provide up to 67 TOPS of INT8 compute for AI ...
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. [26
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
Game critics met Lichdom: Battlemage with mixed reviews. Aggregating game review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the game 72.23% and 69/100. [8] [9] Game Informer rated the game 8/10, praising the story, graphics, voice acting, and the customization system, stating that it had enough depth to continue to be fresh into New Game Plus.
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.
This is a list of eponyms of Nvidia GPU microarchitectures.The eponym in this case is the person after whom an architecture is named. Listed are the person, their portrait, their profession or areas of expertise, their birth year, their death year, their country of origin, the microarchitecture named after them, and the year of release of the GPU architecture.
Magic: The Gathering: Armageddon is an extremely rare arcade game published by Acclaim in 1997, somewhat similar to BattleMage. It is possible that as few as four machines were made. Acclaim's Mountain View, California-based coin-op division went out of business shortly after creating the game, so it never went into full production. [3]