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Uhd 770 Hackintosh Hot

Everyone building these rigs hits a wall. Here are the three hottest errors and their fixes.

Error 1: Kernel Panic on Boot - "IOConsoleUsers: gIOScreenLockState"

Error 2: No Video Output on DisplayPort 1.4

Error 3: System Freezes when opening QuickTime

This is where the "hot" keyword becomes literal. Because the UHD 770 is masquerading as an older UHD 630, the driver matching is imperfect.

Let’s be brutally honest. The UHD 770 Hackintosh is a "hot" topic because it is the final frontier for Intel Hackintosh.

The Reality:

The "Hot" Conclusion If you want a purely integrated graphics Hackintosh, buy a Mini PC with an AMD 680M (Ryzen). But if you already have a 13700K and want to dual boot macOS "just because," the UHD 770 is viable.

To get it "hot" – meaning stable, accelerated, and usable for ProRes proxies or coding – you must:

The Hackintosh community is resilient. While Apple has moved on, the challenge of making the UHD 770 bend to macOS’s will remains one of the hottest technical exercises in 2025. It isn't perfect, but when you see that About This Mac screen displaying "Graphics: UHD 770 1536 MB" with full Metal 3 support... that feeling? That’s the "hot" we are all chasing.

Further Resources:

Proceed with patience, and may your boot times be short.

The Intel UHD 770 is the integrated graphics processing unit (iGPU) found in 12th, 13th, and 14th Generation Intel Core processors (Alder Lake, Raptor Lake, and Raptor Lake Refresh). While these CPUs offer top-tier performance for modern PC builds, they present a significant challenge for the Hackintosh community. Because Apple transitioned to its own Apple Silicon M-series chips before these Intel generations were released, macOS lacks native drivers for the UHD 770 architecture. uhd 770 hackintosh hot

However, "hot" developments in community-driven patching have made it possible to use these modern iGPUs with full acceleration, a feat previously thought impossible. The Compatibility Breakthrough

Historically, Hackintosh experts stated that Intel's 10th Gen (Comet Lake) was the "end of the road" for integrated graphics support. CPUs from the 11th Gen onward used a new architecture that Apple never officially supported.

The "hot" breakthrough for the UHD 770 involves spoofing. By convincing macOS that the UHD 770 is actually an older, supported model—specifically the Intel UHD 630—users can achieve full Metal 3 acceleration and smooth graphical performance in versions like macOS Sequoia and the final Intel-supported release, macOS Tahoe. How to Enable UHD 770 Acceleration

To get the UHD 770 working, you must use the OpenCore bootloader and apply specific DeviceProperties to your config.plist. This process essentially "maps" the unsupported hardware to a supported driver.

SMBIOS Selection: Use a model that still supports Intel CPUs, such as the iMac20,1 or iMacPro1,1.

Key Property Patches: You need to inject a specific AAPL,ig-platform-id and device-id. For example, using the platform ID 07009B3E (data: BwCbPg==) often allows the system to recognize the UHD 770 as a Kaby Lake or Coffee Lake derivative. Everyone building these rigs hits a wall

Metal Support: Modern patches now enable Metal 3, which is required for fluid animations and professional apps like Final Cut Pro or Adobe Creative Cloud. Known Challenges: The "Hot" Issues

While acceleration is possible, this setup is not without its quirks. Users often report the following "hot" issues that require additional troubleshooting:


The UHD 770 struggles when the macOS scheduler bounces tasks to the Efficiency cores during heavy UI renders.

If you do not have a dedicated GPU and must use the UHD 770, here is the current standard procedure for a stable-ish build:

  • BIOS Settings:
  • While you will get full resolution and framebuffer support, many users report a lack of UI "snappiness."