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Gamexplore > My Bookmarks > Hardware > This new Intel tech could instantly make your games load 37x faster with no downsides
Hardware

This new Intel tech could instantly make your games load 37x faster with no downsides

March 19, 2026 5 Min Read
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5 Min Read
This new Intel tech could instantly make your games load 37x faster with no downsides
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Intel‘s new Shader Distribution Service could be set to unlock massive reductions in game load times for owners of Intel Core Ultra 2/3 series CPUs and Intel Arc B-series GPUs. That’s because the newly available download uses pre-compiled shaders instead of waiting for games to compile shaders themselves before loading. Average load time reduction is in the region of 2-3x, depending on your hardware, but some instances can be as much as 37 times faster.

While Intel’s Arc GPU options haven’t exactly lit up our best graphics card guide over the last few years, the Intel Arc B580 has proved itself a decent budget option. Meanwhile, the integrated GPUs in Intel’s Core Ultra 200 and 300 series processors have steadily improved, to the point where you can legitimately game on them. Now, with this latest feature, they have an advantage over even the very fastest GPU options from AMD and Nvidia.

If you’re not familiar with the issue at hand here, the problem that the Intel Graphics Shader Distribution Service aims to fix is that some triple-A titles with highly complex graphics can take many minutes and even hours to be playable when first fired up, due to shader compilation. This step is where a game converts its shader code (all the complex algorithms governing lighting, models, textures, etc) to machine code that can be executed on your particular PC’s hardware.

How Intel is reducing the wait time of this step is that it pre-loads these games onto its own servers and compiles them into packages suited for use with its specific hardware. When your Intel GPU driver then detects that you have this hardware and one of the supported games, it can download the pre-compiled code, instead of waiting for your system to do the donkey work.

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This reliance on Intel going through all these steps for each set of hardware and each game means there’s only a limited number of games currently supported, but the list includes some heavy hitters, such as Black Myth: Wukong, Cyberpunk 2077, Call of Duty: Black Ops 7, and Starfield. You can see the full list of supported games below.

  • Black Myth: Wukong
  • Borderlands 4
  • Call of Duty: Black Ops 6
  • Call of Duty: Black Ops 7
  • Cyberpunk 2077
  • God of War Ragnarök
  • Gotham Knights
  • Hogwarts Legacy
  • NBA 2K26
  • Starfield
  • S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: Heart of Chornobyl
  • The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered
  • The Outer Worlds 2

The speed-up you’ll experience varies considerably from game to game and depends on your hardware, but for Intel Arc B580 owners, you can expect between a 1.3x and a 3.6x load time reduction in all but one of these games. Meanwhile, Intel Core Ultra 9 288V owners can expect between a 1.3x and 14x change in most of these games, and Intel Core Ultra X9 388H owners will get between 1.4x and 5.3x.

intel precompiled shader performance core ultra 9 288v

All three sets of hardware have one outlier result, which is God of War Ragnarok. This title sees a massive 21x speed increase for the Arc B580, a 24x increase for the Intel Core Ultra 9 288V, and a truly ludicrous 37x increase for the Intel Core Ultra X9 388H. The full range of game load times can be seen in the images throughout this article.

To access this new feature, you just need to download the latest Intel Graphics driver version 32.0.101.8626 WHQL, which you can get here. You can also read more about how to enable the feature in Intel’s graphics driver interface here.

See also  New 16GB Nvidia and AMD GPUs are massively outselling 8GB cards, says retailer

intel precompiled shader performance core ultra x9 388h

Intel pre-compiled shaders will generally only affect the first time you load a game, as once the shaders have been compiled, they should be ready to go for the next time you load it up. However, driver and game updates can trigger a new round of compilation, and the service should step in again to speed this up, assuming Intel has kept up with its own updates.

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