Intel just let slip that Arc B770 may be on the way, before swiftly deleting the evidence

While there's still room for doubt, it seems all but certain that Intel plans to reveal Arc B770 in the near future, following this recent social gaffe.

As rumours surrounding Arc B770 intensify, Intel itself potentially just let slip that the graphics card does indeed exist via one of its social channels. The brand has since deleted the post, perhaps indicating an error on the poster’s part, but equally bringing into question whether this was an unintentional leak.

The IntelGaming X account met a user’s excitement for Arc B770, as well as Panther Lake and Nova Lake CPUs, in equal measure. There was no dissuasion that the graphics card isn’t on the way, just an outright acknowledgement in the same breath as mentioning its publicly confirmed processor architectures.

A screen capture of an interaction between the IntelGaming X account and another user, discussing Arc B770.
Source: Notebookcheck / X.

While the post is no longer available to read on X following its deletion, plenty of screen captures have preserved this interaction (as shown above). Since the reply’s removal, Intel hasn’t made any mention of its Arc B770 GPU via this social channel.

This isn’t the first time the IntelGaming account has built up hype for Arc B770. Back in May, the profile replied to calls for the graphics card’s release by saying “stay tuned!” Half a year later, we’re still waiting.

Though Computex 2025 came and went without an official announcement of an Arc B770, there have been plenty of hints that Intel has been quietly working on this GPU in that time. From shipping manifests for a 300W Intel GPU, to explicit mentions of BMG-G31 in software updates, it’s looking more and more likely that this GPU does indeed exist.

For those out of the loop, references to BMG-G31 are especially curious as this is the GPU die that will supposedly power Intel’s Arc B770. Nicknamed “big Battlemage”, these dies will allegedly pack 60% more Xe2 cores than the BMG-G21 powering Intel’s Arc B580, potentially offering a substantial performance uplift.

Whether that’s enough of a spec upgrade for Intel’s potential pixel pushing champion to trade blows with AMD and Intel’s offerings remains an open question. The same token applies to which cards the Arc B770 would be battling in this competitive arena, but my best guess right now is Nvidia’s RTX 5060 Ti 16GB and AMD’s Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB.

Should this not be a simple social blunder on Intel’s part, we may learn more about the Arc B770 come CES 2026. Team Blue has sessions scheduled from Monday, January 5, to Thursday, January 8. So, if you’re keen to know more, to quote the brand: stay tuned.

You can expect first-hand impressions from the Club386 team of everything going on with Intel right from the CES 2026 show floor. To make sure you don’t miss any announcements, give our Google News feed a follow. Don’t forget to join the conversation on socials too.

Samuel Willetts
Samuel Willetts
With a mouse in hand from the age of four, Sam brings two-decades-plus of passion for PCs and tech in his duties as Hardware Editor for Club386. Equipped with an English & Creative Writing degree, waxing lyrical about everything from processors to power supplies comes second nature.

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