Intel has released the Arc Pro B70, a workstation graphics card designed specifically for AI and professional workloads [1, 2].
This release signals Intel's strategic shift toward the enterprise sector as artificial intelligence demands more specialized hardware. By prioritizing professional utility over gaming, Intel aims to capture a segment of the market that requires high memory capacity for complex data processing.
The Arc Pro B70 features 32 GB of VRAM [1]. It is built using the BMG-G31 silicon, also known as "Big Battlemage" [3]. The card is available through Intel and its various channel partners [1, 2].
Retail pricing for the unit is approximately $1,000 [4]. While the card is intended for workstations, some testers have evaluated its performance in gaming environments. These results vary across reports. One analysis said the GPU falls behind the Nvidia RTX 5060 Ti [3]. Another report said the performance almost matches the RTX 5060 Ti 16 GB model [4].
Intel's focus on the professional market is evident in the card's specifications. The high VRAM capacity is a critical requirement for AI models, and large-scale rendering tasks—capabilities that typically outweigh raw gaming frame rates in a corporate setting [2].
Despite the professional branding, the BMG-G31 silicon represents a significant step in Intel's GPU architecture. The company continues to iterate on its Arc line to compete with established players in the workstation space, though it avoids direct competition with high-end consumer gaming hardware [2, 3].
“The Arc Pro B70 features 32 GB of VRAM.”
Intel is pivoting its hardware strategy to align with the AI boom, prioritizing VRAM capacity and professional stability over consumer gaming benchmarks. By releasing a 32GB card at a $1,000 price point, Intel is positioning itself as a viable alternative for entry-to-mid-level AI workstations, challenging Nvidia's dominance in the professional sector without risking a direct, high-stakes battle in the gaming market.


