Tag:Intel - Page 7

Crimson Desert refuses to launch on millions of Intel Arc GPUs, developer recommends seeking refunds

Pearl Abyss is recommending Crimson Desert owners to seek refunds if they play on Intel Arc graphics, hinting that the game may never be supported.

Intel massively reduces game load times, eliminating wait to compile shaders on Arc GPUs

Intel's Precompiled Shader Delivery is now enabled on Arc B-series and Core Ultra graphics with its latest driver, boosting first-launch loads by up to 3x.

Best motherboard 2026: the top AMD and Intel CPU platforms tested

Find the right home for your AMD Ryzen AM5 or Intel Core LGA1851 CPU, with our full buying guide based on expert in-depth reviews and testing.

Intel announces its “fastest gaming desktop processors ever” – meet Arrow Lake Refresh

Intel Core Ultra 7 270K Plus and 250K Plus are now official, with more cores, and an intriguing new change to boost gaming performance.

An interview with Intel: why Bartlett Lake isn’t coming to desktops, Panther Lake handhelds, CPU sockets, and more

We talk to Intel UK general manager, Simon Wilyman, about gaming handhelds, Bartlett Lake on the desktop, and RAM prices.

Best GPU 2026: the top Nvidia and AMD gaming graphics cards tested

Find the ideal GPU for your machine, whether that's an AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT for 1080p play, or an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 for all-out 4K gaming.

Intel Arrow Lake Refresh CPUs contain new tech to “boost performance” in games, according to leak

A leaked invite to a session about Intel Core Ultra 200S Plus processors states that they have "new technical features" specifically targeted at gaming.

Intel Core Ultra 5 250K Plus benchmarks break cover with a mixed bag of results

An early Intel Arrow Lake Refresh benchmark points to greater multi-threaded chops but only a minimal change in single-threaded performance.

Nvidia continues crushing competition, claiming 94% of discrete GPU market

Nvidia secures 94% of the desktop AIB GPU market, leaving AMD far behind with just 5%, and Intel even further with a mere 1%.