These revelations come from the Intel Developer Conference (IDC) over in Tokyo, where the chip giant had plenty to say about the Gen12 graphics which will be incorporated with its Tiger Lake laptop processors (the successor to current Ice Lake chips) and Xe discrete GPUs, both of which are expected to arrive next year.
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Gen11 allows a game such as Rocket League to run at close to 60 fps, but the likes of Fortnite or Dirt Rally 2.0 are more like 40 to 45 fps (still playable, but it’s that 60 fps threshold which is widely regarded as smooth gaming).
And according to Intel’s presentation info, Tiger Lake’s integrated Gen12 graphics make that jump to 60 fps at 1080p resolution. Kenichiro Yasu, director of Intel technology headquarters, asserted that Gen12 offers double the performance compared to Gen11, and that Intel is firmly targeting 60 fps.
Affordable gaming laptops
So that’s obviously great news for those who can’t afford a fully-fledged gaming laptop with a discrete GPU, and rely on integrated graphics, yet still want to play some midrange games with a good deal of fluidity (and maybe even manage some more demanding titles with the details turned down at a solid enough frame-rate).As mentioned, these Tiger Lake chips should be out in 2020, and the company also again reaffirmed that standalone Intel Xe graphics cards will also be launching next year.
In terms of the latter, an Intel exec recently hinted on Twitter that Xe graphics cards are scheduled to arrive in June 2020 (although it was a rather cryptic tweet – although Intel has something of a history of these). Of course, even if that is Intel’s intention for a planned launch date, things might yet slip…
Via Wccftech
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