![]() ![]() It appears that Rocket Lake has been added to the compatibility list. Interestingly, it also features a Core i5-11400F, despite Intel previously saying the GPU could only be paired with 9th-Gen (Coffee Lake) and 10th-Gen (Comet Lake) processors. The PC comes with a single stick of 8GB DDR4-3000 memory, which ETA PRIME swapped out for dual-channel 16GB DDR4-3600 to give a bit of a performance uplift. The card's specs come in at 80 execution units (EUs) or 640 shading units, 4GB of LPDDR4X-4266 across a 128-bit interface, a 1,500 MHz boost clock speed, and it runs at just 30W, meaning external PCIe power connectors are not required and it can be passively cooled. It was tested across a range of games, giving us a better idea of the capabilities. However, YouTube channel ETA PRIME managed to get its hands on a DG1 via a prebuilt, $749.99 CyberPowerPC gaming system that includes an Asus DG1-4G. The result suggested it offered performance inferior to the Polaris-based Radeon RX 550 released back in 2017, which isn't great. The first benchmark of the Intel Xe DG1 graphics card appeared on the Basemark GPU database back in April. ![]() In a nutshell: We already knew that Intel's Xe DG1 graphics card isn't going to be competing with the latest and greatest from Nvidia and AMD, but a new review shows it has potential as a budget 1080p option. ![]()
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