Gregory Bryant, the vice president and general manager of Intel’s desktop client’s platform has stated the following regarding Intel’s Iris or Iris Pro, which according to the individual can perform at 80 percent of discrete graphic cards. Sure, the latest integrated chips can definitely render 4K video with three monitors connected simultaneously, but rendering heavy textures in demanding gaming titles is a whole new ball game altogether. They might have picked up substantially where performance compared to their predecessors is concerned, but in our opinion, iGPUs have a very long to go before they can come remotely to the performance of mid-ranged and high-end graphic cards. They might be able to give the lower tier lineup of graphic cards a healthy competition, but Intel suggesting that you can immerse in gaming titles without the use of a dedicated graphics chip is completely ridiculous. With virtual reality expected to take gaming capabilities beyond the regular desktop platforms, Intel will definitely have to put in a lot of effort with its upcoming Cannonlake processors, which are expected to be processed on the 10nm FinFET technology. Hopefully, as the lithography of processors get smaller with every processor generation, we will see thorough improvements when the graphical performance of Intel iGPUs are concerned. However, right now, is it possible to replace your entire graphics chip with integrated ones? Absolutely not.