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i typo'd, should have been 7700xt.7800xt is 16GB (the 7700xt is the one at 12GB), at $370 it would be quite competitive with the new offering.
the 7800xts are still $750-900....
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i typo'd, should have been 7700xt.7800xt is 16GB (the 7700xt is the one at 12GB), at $370 it would be quite competitive with the new offering.
except that the 7700xt still beats it, by a lot, in everything ive seen except tlou2...I’d take a 9060 XT over a 7700 XT any day. VRAM, efficiency, FSR 4 support, it’s really no contest.
That wasn’t my impression from the reviews. TechPowerUp has the 7700 XT only 4% ahead of the 9060 XT, and RDNA 4 can achieve massive OC’s just by undervolting, so I would expect the 9060 XT to come out even or ahead if both cards have been tweaked for max performance at, say, 180 Watts or less. Then throw in FSR 4 + Redstone in the future vs XeSS on the 7700 XT, and you’re looking at effectively +20% performance on the 9060 vs the 7700 for the same IQ. Even if AMD does bring FSR 4 to RDNA 3 with all the features, I’ll bet it runs at least 10% faster on RDNA 4.except that the 7700xt still beats it, by a lot, in everything ive seen except tlou2...
That wasn’t my impression from the reviews. TechPowerUp has the 7700 XT only 4% ahead of the 9060 XT, and RDNA 4 can achieve massive OC’s just by undervolting, so I would expect the 9060 XT to come out even or ahead if both cards have been tweaked for max performance at, say, 180 Watts or less. Then throw in FSR 4 + Redstone in the future vs XeSS on the 7700 XT, and you’re looking at effectively +20% performance on the 9060 vs the 7700 for the same IQ. Even if AMD does bring FSR 4 to RDNA 3 with all the features, I’ll bet it runs at least 10% faster on RDNA 4.
I’d even sell my old 6800 XT if I still had it and pick up a 9060 XT for even money, even though the 6800 XT is a good 15-20% faster on-paper. Not a 7800 XT, though, I’d still pay an extra ~$40 over a 9060 XT for one of those. I’ll grant that I don’t think 16 GB matters at this performance level, though. I doubt the 9060 XT could benefit from more than 12 GB outside of certain contrived scenarios or outlier games. It’s mainly a psychological benefit.
not what ive seen, only a couple games had the 9060xt faster, but those were all yt vids and i dont have hands on either to confirm....
Every reputable reviewer has the 7700 XT and the 9060 XT in a dead-heat across game averages, plus or minus 2-3%. And that's with RDNA4 drivers being much less mature.not what ive seen, only a couple games had the 9060xt faster, but those were all yt vids and i dont have hands on either to confirm....
it was side by side videos, same settings, only thing it got beat in was tlou2. every other game, i think it was 30ish between what ive watched, the 7700xt was between 5-25fps faster.Every reputable reviewer has the 7700 XT and the 9060 XT in a dead-heat across game averages, plus or minus 2-3%. And that's with RDNA4 drivers being much less mature.
Not to mention the architectural and thermal advancements... zero reason to get a 7700 over a 9060 if they're readily available around the same price.
And any YouTube'r who has the 7700 beating the 9060 "by a lot" needs to recuse themselves from reviewing products. Even the 7800 isn't far enough ahead for the additional power consumption to not be considered.
yeah thats exactly what i saidSo reviews that can be proven to exist don't matter? Odd take.
Yeah, it is a toss-up, and I think it depends on what you're running and what sort of screen you're driving. No upscaling, no RT unless mandatory, always or mostly run native res, probably go for the 7700XT unless you have vram worries. Trying to drive a Hisense 55" U78G 4k TV without buying a high end card and run the new stuff? I'd be thinking 9060XT. Haven't tried one, but I gave an ARC B580 a pretty good workout at 4k. The games it can't handle at 4k are generally slightly older heavy titles that don't have XeSS or FSR. Like can't get to 60 on low settings can't handle. 9060XT 16GB or 7700XT will be better than a B580, but not hugely better and you'll still end up using some sort of upscaling in heavier titles if you're driving that 4k Hisense in your sig. I suppose the other big caveat with TVs is they're getting fancy upscaling too. I don't know much about this, I just know they're advertising "AI upscaling" on TV specs. Complain all you want about upscaling in games, but 4k TVs just plain need something. A lot of broadcast TV is still 1080p, and at this point any TV that isn't 4k is low end. 2021 Hisense probably doesn't have fancy upscaling built in, but I could easily see new and higher end sets making DLSS/FSR/XeSS obsolete on TVs and that tech trickling down to lower end models and computer monitors. And you know getting rid of 1080p broadcast is going to take ages and another government converter box program.it was side by side videos, same settings, only thing it got beat in was tlou2. every other game, i think it was 30ish between what ive watched, the 7700xt was between 5-25fps faster.
i get your point, but its a toss up imo. especially if i dont use all the fake frame bullshit...
yeah thats the tv im on but its primarily 4k for movies. for gaming i fine with 1440 or 4k with quality(or hq) fsr. i cant do the framegen stuff though, i can feel it. so thats why im undecided. since supply seems fine ill probably wait. i have to redo my work health care shit in august and i can slip "computer hardware" into one of the new categories...Yeah, it is a toss-up, and I think it depends on what you're running and what sort of screen you're driving. No upscaling, no RT unless mandatory, always or mostly run native res, probably go for the 7700XT unless you have vram worries. Trying to drive a Hisense 55" U78G 4k TV without buying a high end card and run the new stuff? I'd be thinking 9060XT. Haven't tried one, but I gave an ARC B580 a pretty good workout at 4k. The games it can't handle at 4k are generally slightly older heavy titles that don't have XeSS or FSR. Like can't get to 60 on low settings can't handle. 9060XT 16GB or 7700XT will be better than a B580, but not hugely better and you'll still end up using some sort of upscaling in heavier titles if you're driving that 4k Hisense in your sig. I suppose the other big caveat with TVs is they're getting fancy upscaling too. I don't know much about this, I just know they're advertising "AI upscaling" on TV specs. Complain all you want about upscaling in games, but 4k TVs just plain need something. A lot of broadcast TV is still 1080p, and at this point any TV that isn't 4k is low end. 2021 Hisense probably doesn't have fancy upscaling built in, but I could easily see new and higher end sets making DLSS/FSR/XeSS obsolete on TVs and that tech trickling down to lower end models and computer monitors. And you know getting rid of 1080p broadcast is going to take ages and another government converter box program.
Oh, yeah, I'm not big on framegen either. Hurts latency, I don't feel much difference, and I'm not one of those people who freak out if they're not running 240fps. I just need latency low enough that I can aim properly. Framegen often looks smoother, but it doesn't feel smoother. Sometimes it has a rubberband feel. For most single player stuff I'm quite happy with 1% lows at 60+. A little lower is ok, but 60+ 1% lows is what I usually aim for when adjusting graphics settings in single player games unless it's a straight up shooter. Then I want more. I rarely play fast paced PvP multiplayer and don't have a proper PvP monitor, so if I do I try to lock the monitor at max refresh. 138Hz for the OLED on my main rig or 120Hz for my TV. Drop settings, upscaling, whatever it takes... but no framegen.yeah thats the tv im on but its primarily 4k for movies. for gaming i fine with 1440 or 4k with quality(or hq) fsr. i cant do the framegen stuff though, i can feel it. so thats why im undecided. since supply seems fine ill probably wait. i have to redo my work health care shit in august and i can slip "computer hardware" into one of the new categories...
Emergency Microcenter run... but that would take 3 rigs going down. Lightning strike?what happens if your main rig goes down
wasnt asking for your opinion... there was no option.Emergency Microcenter run... but that would take 3 rigs going down. Lightning strike?
There's always an option, like not bothering to game on ancient gear until your stuff comes back from RMA. Testing with an ancient proc is entertaining, but I'd probably just watch TV, read a book, etc. until I fixed my setup.wasnt asking for your opinion... there was no option.
what happens if your main rig goes down and all ya got to get by with is an old FX based setup?
for curiosity's sake he puts it on a 6330...
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhdsRy86uoc
9060 XT will win in ray tracing. For pure raster, yes it should be a dead heat. Also consider that the 9060XT 16GB has 4GB more of ram than the 7700XT which comes standard with 12GB.Every reputable reviewer has the 7700 XT and the 9060 XT in a dead-heat across game averages, plus or minus 2-3%. And that's with RDNA4 drivers being much less mature.
Not to mention the architectural and thermal advancements... zero reason to get a 7700 over a 9060 if they're readily available around the same price.
And any YouTube'r who has the 7700 beating the 9060 "by a lot" needs to recuse themselves from reviewing products. Even the 7800 isn't far enough ahead for the additional power consumption to not be considered.
you have one, try it.I'm interested in how the 9060 XT 16GB handles Re Live as to record itself in game play, how much is the hit now to fps as it should have no issues with the vram and how good is video streaming on the new card.
It has not arrived yet, I will.you have one, try it.
it is a decent card, still a little pricey for what it is though. cheapest ive seem them up here is for $490. $400 used to get me the *700 class (now the 9070s)....
To a point, their margin did not change that much since 2016 it seems and went down after the Ethereum mining stopped peak, because they had to charge less.In short, TSMC can just raise prices to whatever they want to charge.
Could be a new normal until a raw technological change, not just competition, they could go back to a 4x% company with big competition, but price increase followed cost increase for the most part.new normal until someone gets close to TSMC in offering competitive nodes.
Yeah the ones I can go buy hassle free here at Micro Center are $389 and up. 16g cards obvit is a decent card, still a little pricey for what it is though. cheapest ive seem them up here is for $490. $400 used to get me the *700 class (now the 9070s)....
Newegg has them for $370 (ASRock Challenger) and up.Yeah the ones I can go buy hassle free here at Micro Center are $389 and up. 16g cards obv
It's amazing how expensive polished silicon costs.To a point it seems, their margin did not change that much since 2016 it seems and went down after the Ethereum mining stopped peak, because they had to charge less.
View attachment 737609View attachment 737610
Apple, AMD and other clients cannot charge the price they want, so they cannot pay any price for a wafer and TSMC cannot charge any price they want.
Could be a new normal until a raw technological change, not just competition, they could go back to a 4x% company with big competition, but price increase followed cost increase for the most part.
Yup, don't make the mistake of buying the 8GB card. Not worth it in 2025.Newegg has them for $370 (ASRock Challenger) and up.
Same at mine, took a while before the 16GB MSRP cards sold out too. Have any of the 9070 or XTs been marked down at your location? A few of each have near me but nothing down to MSRP yet.Yeah the ones I can go buy hassle free here at Micro Center are $389 and up. 16g cards obv
You gotta remember that the “MSRP” for the 9070s was fake as the price at launch was subsidized by AMD giving rebates directly to the board partners . The actual MSRP of the cards is basically what we’re seeing now, roughly $700 or so which aligns with past AMD pricing strategies of “Nvidia minus $50”Same at mine, took a while before the 16GB MSRP cards sold out too. Have any of the 9070 or XTs been marked down at your location? A few of each have near me but nothing down to MSRP yet.
I think 12GB is fine on my ARC B580, but wouldn't be on a faster card. How much faster I'm not sure. 9060XT is ballpark 1/3 faster than a B580, so I figure it would run into situations where it would be held back with 12GB more than a B580, but probably not a lot more. I don't think 12GB is enough for an RTX 5070. Those are ~80% faster than a B580 and could actually run fancy RT stuff where my B580 gives me 40fps. A hypothetical 12GB 9060XT with a 192-bit bus might actually be better. It would be in some situations. 192-bit bus would have 50% more memory bandwidth, so it would be faster as long as it didn't run out of vram.I could see a 12GB model being sufficient for 1080P or maybe even 1440P but 8GB has real performance issues in several modern games.