Earlier, PC Gamer wrote an open letter to Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, calling on Intel to address the long-standing shortage of supply and premium in the graphics market. Raja Koduri, intel's senior vice president, chief architect and general manager of architecture, graphics and software, responded to the open letter on social platforms, saying it was a huge problem for PC gamers and the industry as a whole. Intel is working to find a way to achieve this mission of putting millions of gaming graphics cards into the hands of PC gamers each year.

Recently, Intel CEO Pat Kilsinger also publicly responded to the relevant content, saying that Intel is working hard. Although it may not be difficult to say a few nice words, and there are not too many words to appease PC players, the statements of the two main leaders at least express Intel's positive attitude, but it remains to be seen how much Intel's release of Intel Arc brand alchemy graphics will have on the market in the future.
At present, many people are skeptical about whether Intel can change the supply of PC discrete graphics market, which is not surprising, after all, Intel's GPU uses the capacity of TSMC N6 process, and it is already stretched in capacity allocation, and may not be able to achieve the promised supply. In addition, Intel has not yet said whether it will add restrictions similar to the Nvidia GeForce RTX 30 LHR series on GPUs, resulting in these new graphics cards not eventually flowing to PC players, and the so-called help will be limited.