Fahd Temsamani - Page 62

Senior Writer at Club386, his love for computers began with an IBM running MS-DOS, and he’s been pushing the limits of technology ever since. Known for his overclocking prowess, Fahd once unlocked an extra 1.1GHz from a humble Pentium E5300 - a feat that cemented his reputation as a master tinkerer. Fluent in English, Arabic, and French, his motto when building a new rig is ‘il ne faut rien laisser au hasard.’

Nvidia may launch RTX 5080 Super or RTX 5080 Ti before end of 2025

Further rumours claim to confirm the existence of an RTX 5080 refresh, but it's unclear whether it will don a Super or Ti moniker.

Intel meets requests for Arc B770 GPU with promising response

Intel social media hints that Arc B770 may be in the works, with hopes high the brand will reveal more at Computex 2025.

Valve expects over 18,000 games to be immediately SteamOS compatible

Valve announces a new verification program adding compatibility ratings to devices running SteamOS that aren’t a Steam Deck.

Next-gen Intel and AMD GPUs look well under way

Dataminers have discovered mention of Intel Arc Druid Xe4 and AMD Radeon UDNA GPUs in document notes, indicating that Arc isn’t dead yet.

AMD confirms AM5 can properly use CUDIMM RAM, possibly hinting at imminent support

It's unclear how CUDIMM support will arrive to AM5, or how far-reaching it will be, but comments from Team Red indicate its en route.

AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT may feature x16 and higher clock speeds than RX 9070

Rumours indicate that AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT could reach a 3.3GHz frequency, eclipsing that of its bigger RX 9070 brother.

MSI upgrades storage on its Claw 8 AI+ Polar Tempest handheld

MSI refreshes its Claw 8 AI+ gaming handled with a new style and larger 2TB storage capacity, letting you to enjoy more games on the go.

Gigabyte teases RTX 5090 Aorus Stealth GPU to accompany its back-connect motherboards

Gigabyte unveils GeForce RTX 5090 Stealth Ice graphics card with hidden power cables, perfect for clean 270° panoramic PC builds.

Upcoming AMD Epyc CPUs could boast up to 256 cores

AMD Zen 6 and Zen 6c architectures to offer more cores than ever for data centres, while doubling the cache amount over Turin designs.