According to Intel, Koduri will help to bring together and evolve the company's overall graphics capabilities. It's not just something that will make games run faster -- the company says it'll also help with things like media, imaging and machine intelligence. Unfortunately, Intel isn't saying much else about its graphics plans yet, but there's certainly plenty of room for it to improve. AMD's recently announced Ryzen laptop CPUs promise decent gaming performance, thanks to their integrated Radeon Vega graphics. That's something Intel can't compete directly with today, it still has to rely on additional graphical power from NVIDIA and AMD.

Koduri re-joined AMD in 2013, where he spearheaded the development of the company's new Polaris GPUs. That line kicked off with the Radeon RX 480, a $200 card that was fast enough to power VR headsets. It arrived just as NVIDIA was delivering its ultra-powerful GTX 10-series cards, but the RX 480 was notable for being cheaper than anything NVIDIA was offering at the time. Intel says Koduri will officially start his new role in December.