After splitting the graphics driver for the 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14th gen processor integrated graphics, Intel has confirmed that it will be transitioning to the Legacy software support model.
Intel Ends Day 0 Game Support for 11th/12th/13th/14th Gen Processor Graphics; Will Only Offer Security and Critical Updates
Intel has officially announced that it will be transitioning to the legacy software support model for several Intel CPU series graphics, which we talked about recently. The company recently rolled out a dedicated graphics driver for the 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14th gen Processor Graphics (and Iris Xe dGPU), indicating that it will no longer offer GPU driver updates for these families alongside the Arc and Core Ultra series.
In a recently published support article, Intel has confirmed that it is indeed slowing down the driver support for these CPU families and will be focusing on delivering critical and security updates for these CPUs instead. Multiple families will be affected by this transition, including the mainstream desktop families, such as Raptor Lake Refresh, which is hardly two years old. You should expect both desktop and laptop series to be affected by the change, as well as the Intel Iris Xe dGPU.
As of September 19, 2025, Intel will be moving 11th - 14th Gen Intel Processor Graphics and related Intel Atom®, Pentium®, and Celeron® processor graphics to a legacy software support model. Intel will provide software support for affected products on critical fixes and security vulnerabilities only. Software updates for these products will move to a quarterly release cadence with additional critical releases as needed.
- Intel
In the FAQ, Intel confirmed that it won't be offering Day 0 Game support on these processors anymore, and will be instead rolling out 'only' critical fixes and security vulnerability updates quarterly. On the other hand, the newer Core Ultra series (Meteor Lake, Lunar Lake, and Arrow Lake) will continue to get monthly Graphics Driver updates for improved Day 0 game support.
The transition to the legacy software support for 11th-14th generation processor is something that won't necessarily be a huge deal for gamers since one can hardly play games on their iGPUs. However, Intel must keep delivering the critical updates and optimizations for these, as millions of users are still carrying out day-to-day operations on iGPUs. Maybe by splitting off from the Arc & Iris Graphics Driver, Intel will be able to focus better on the newer products.
News Source: Intel
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