I played games for 100 hours on Intel Arc B580 — it proved to me that GPUs are Intel's way back from the brink

The best budget GPU is Intel’s redemption arc.

Intel Arc B580
Editor's Choice
(Image: © Future)

Tom's Guide Verdict

The Intel Arc B580 is easily the best budget gaming GPU you can buy right now. At $249 (provided you can find one at this MSRP), you won’t find anything else new that comes close for 1440p gaming. Just mind that ray tracing setting and multipurpose utility of the card.

Pros

  • +

    Impressive 1080p and 1440p gaming performance

  • +

    12GB of VRAM

  • +

    Intel XeSS is improving nicely

  • +

    $249 is a steal

Cons

  • -

    Turn ray tracing off

  • -

    Not the best for work

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Intel’s in a tough spot. I don’t need to sit here and wax lyrical about the perfect storm Team Blue finds itself in amongst rivals moving ahead in CPU and AI chip dominance — you can see it for yourself in the financial results and redundancies.

But there’s one jewel in the crown that I believe could be the company’s way back: budget GPUs. The $249 Intel Arc B580 is easily the best low-cost card I’ve tested, and it puts Nvidia and AMD on notice for their compromised low-cost options.

For gaming, it’s simply splendid at 1080p and 1440p — offering strong performance with a spacious 12GB of video memory (VRAM) and a higher memory bandwidth than the RTX 5060 Ti for loading larger textures and graphical details at a far faster pace and virtually eliminate any chance of that frame rate getting all wobbly in the process. And bear in mind that you’re getting this for $130 less than Nvidia’s mid-range GPU with 8GB of VRAM!

There are a couple of small sore spots we do have to address. Firstly, ray tracing is not its strong suit, and with some games now making RT required, you’ll need to tone down those other textures to compensate. Luckily, you can just turn this off in the vast majority of PC titles, so it's not that big of a deal.

And second, if you are using your gaming tower for anything other than gaming, be prepared for slower performance in AI and professional work. Don’t get me wrong, it’ll still chew through it, but Nvidia’s CUDA cores steam ahead here.

That being said though, there is absolutely nothing at this price tag that can compete in the gaming space. It is a budget champ and after 100 hours of playing, I believe this is an area where Intel can really thrive — the company knows it too given the onward march of driver updates gradually improving performance and its own AI trickery (XeSS).

Intel Arc B580: Cheat Sheet

  • What is it? This is a budget PC graphics card.
  • Who is it for? This is for people who are looking for good 1080p and 1440p gaming at a low cost.
  • What does it cost? MSRP starts at $249. For a while, stock was super low, which drove the price up. But luckily, that seems to be evening out now and the lowest price I can find currently is $259.
  • What do I like? This is seriously good value-for-money — unseen in the pricey world of GPUs. 12GB of video memory with a 192-bit bandwidth for faster graphics loading leads the way with a respectable clock speed to keep up with all AAA titles I threw at it.
  • What don’t I like? Intel’s XeSS tech is on the up-and-up, but doesn’t contend with the wide support of Nvidia DLSS. Ray tracing can be its achilles heel too, and creative and AI workloads do run slower with this card.

Intel Arc B580: Specs

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Header Cell - Column 0

Intel Arc B580

Price

$249 / £249

Video memory

12GB GDDR6

Texture Mapping Units (TMUs)

160

Render Output Units (ROPs)

80

Clock speed

2,670 MHz

Power consumption (TDP)

190W

Ports

1x HDMI 2.1, 3x DisplayPort 1.4a

The Tom’s Guide test PC

Intel Arc B580: 3DMark tests

Intel Arc B580

(Image credit: Future)

Intel Arc B580: The ups

So long as you’re savvy about playing in the confines of what this budget GPU can do, you’re going to have a whole lot of fun with any AAA title you throw at it.

A budget gaming monster

Intel Arc B580

(Image credit: Future)

Let me tear the bandaid off real quick and say you shouldn’t try 4K with this. In the words of a friendly ski instructor in South Park: “you’re going to have a bad time.” That being said, though, you’re reading this because you’re on the hunt for a cheap GPU — meaning you already know that 1080p and maybe 1440p is your target.

Well, wait until you get a load of this.

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Raw rasterization performance (no DLSS)

GPU

Cyberpunk 2077 ray tracing ultra 1440p

Forza Horizon 5 max settings 1440p

Call of Duty max settings 1440p

Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060 Ti (16GB)

17.86 FPS

94 FPS

80 FPS

Intel Arc B580

10.06 FPS

79 FPS

72 FPS

So far, mixed numbers, right? Comparing numbers I captured from the more premium RTX 5060 Ti 16GB can be a bit “apples and oranges,” and with these tests coming with a healthy dose of ray tracing, you start to see a weakness (more on that later).

That’s why it’s critical to go into your settings and turn off ray tracing. I know some people love that additional shiny lighting and reflection detail, but honestly, after sinking many hours into the B580, it's rare that you miss it. Especially when you get numbers like this from a $249 graphics card.

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Intel Arc B580 game performance (optimal settings)

Game

Optimal settings

Frame rate (FPS)

Cyberpunk 2077

1440p Ultra no ray tracing / XeSS frame gen

90.12 FPS

Black Myth: Wukong

1440p Medium no ray tracing / XeSS

77 FPS

Forza Horizon 5

1440p Ultra no ray tracing / XeSS

106 FPS

Alan Wake 2

1440p high no ray tracing

45 FPS

And with baked in lighting on the likes of Cyberpunk 2077 and Forza Horizon 5, they’re still gorgeous games. The B580 absolutely eats them up with the greatest of ease.

It’s $249. That’s it. That’s the headline

Intel Arc B580

(Image credit: Future)

In a world where companies are charging $50 more for cards packing far less video memory and far lower power, it almost feels like a breath of fresh air to just get a great gaming graphics card at a reasonable price.

For context, I’ve pulled some average numbers for Nvidia’s RTX 5060 from 3DMark’s benchmark database to compare. While you can see the 5060 does indeed pull slightly ahead, it’s nowhere near to warrant paying more for less VRAM.

And yes, there is DLSS trickery and multi-frame gen that will make this pop out ahead in frame rate. But this all works provided you play in Nvidia’s playground. Beyond that, you need more memory to load the increasingly complex textures, and Intel gives you that for a nice touch of future-proofing.

Intel Arc B580: The downs

“$249? What’s the catch?” I hear you ask. Well, honestly for gaming, not really much. There’s a small hitch, but the real catch comes when I try to do work with it.

Don’t trace rays with this thing

Intel Arc B580

(Image credit: Future)

This is more of a PSA for now, given the majority of games give you the option to turn it off. Ray tracing is not the B580’s strong suit, as you could clearly see from the comparison numbers above.

Once you turn it off, then you start to lean less on the weaker RT cores in here, and more upon that quick clock speed, those TMUs and the impressive amount of video memory.

But with games like Indiana Jones and The Great Circle needing ray tracing as a minimum, this could be a glimpse of how spec requirements will change in the future — possibly proving problematic for certain games over the next few years.

Not the best workhorse

Intel Arc B580

(Image credit: Future)

Luckily, I don’t use my gaming tower for productivity. But if you do, this isn’t the strongest when it comes to GPU-intensive workloads like creative work and AI.

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GPU

Blender benchmark Median (higher is better)

Procyon AI image gen Stable Diffusion XL (higher is better)

Intel Arc B580

2201

1186

Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060

3703

1317

With other lower-cost GPUs coming in with faster performance in animation, complex 4K video edits and RAW photo neural filters, this is good for gaming but not for work.

Intel Arc B580: Verdict

Intel Arc B580

(Image credit: Future)

And that lands the Intel Arc B580 in interesting territory — ditching what it believes is unnecessary and focusing solely on playing games well for a cheap price. For that, this GPU absolutely delivers.

With nice headroom in the VRAM department, strong performance across all AAA titles (provided you turn ray tracing off), and that impressively low price tag, for PC gamers on a budget, I’m struggling to really identify any deal-breaking complaints.

Affordable graphics cards could be Intel’s redemption arc, and I hope Intel keeps pushing hard on this to be a budget leader. Because based on the B580, it’s absolutely deserved.

TOPICS
Jason England
Managing Editor — Computing

Jason brings a decade of tech and gaming journalism experience to his role as a Managing Editor of Computing at Tom's Guide. He has previously written for Laptop Mag, Tom's Hardware, Kotaku, Stuff and BBC Science Focus. In his spare time, you'll find Jason looking for good dogs to pet or thinking about eating pizza if he isn't already.

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