![]() ![]() Here are some other general guidelines we follow: If an update does roll out, we quickly sanity check a previous result to make sure performance remains the same. ![]() Because some games update frequently, our goal is to always clear through our chosen set of GPUs before any of our tested games manage to drop a new update. GeForce: WD Blue 3D NAND 1TB (SATA 6Gbps)Īll of our testing is done using the latest versions (at the time of benchmarking) of Windows (10, 20H2) and all of the games tested. NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER (8GB GeForce 465.89) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER (8GB GeForce 465.89) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti (11GB GeForce 465.89) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 (12GB GeForce 465.89) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti (8GB GeForce 465.89) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 (8GB GeForce 465.89) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 (10GB GeForce 465.89) NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 (24GB GeForce 465.89) Enabling it in supported games will generally improve the frame rate by 1.5x to 2x – so it’s pretty significant.įor those who do care quite a lot about ray traced games, we plan to tackle a good collection in the weeks ahead that will paint a great picture overall of performance from AMD’s current-gen RDNA2 cards, as well as NVIDIA’s current- and previous-gen RTX options.ĪMD Ryzen 9 5950X (3.4GHz Base, 4.9GHz Turbo, 16C/32T) Even if both AMD and NVIDIA were on par with ray tracing, NVIDIA pushes things to the next level with the help of its DLSS technology. While AMD support for RT is growing and improving quickly, NVIDIA still has the best support overall, and not to mention the best performance. ![]() This article is not going to be covering ray tracing performance, but as we’ve covered before, if RT acceleration is important to you, then NVIDIA is where you should be looking. Naturally, for anyone wanting the absolute best performance out of these top-end resolutions, the RTX 3090 (or RX 6900 XT) are your likely targets. That card offers similar performance to the last-gen RTX 2080 Ti, which was the top-end option for NVIDIA’s last-gen lineup (if we ignore the non-GeForce TITAN RTX). On the NVIDIA side, the RTX 3070 should be considered the ideal starting point. Of course, that only means so much when current GPU prices are most commonly found to be much higher than SRP (which goes for NVIDIA, as well.) The RX 6800 non-XT is likely the most ideal choice here, if we’re looking at things from a bang-for-the-buck perspective. Depending on how high you want to put your graphics settings, even the 6700 XT may not offer enough oomph overall. If you’re looking to game at 4K or ultrawide resolution with an AMD GPU, the newer RX 6700 XT should be treated as the bare minimum, as the last-gen RDNA cards are going to leave a lot to be desired in most cases. To give some extra perspective, these tables also include last-gen models.Īrchitecture: RX 6000 = RDNA2 RX 5000 = RDNA To avoid repeating ourselves here, we’re going to skip that page here, but point anyone who cares about those results to hop over to the respective 3DMark, VRMark, and Superposition page from that article.īefore jumping into our test results, let’s quickly go over AMD’s and NVIDIA’s GPU lineups. ![]() In our 1080p/1440p article, we tested the entire set of current-gen GPUs for our synthetic tests. Notably, AMD’s and NVIDIA’s top-end GPUs have made an appearance here, as they are pretty much overkill for lower-resolutions, but perfectly-suited for top-end resolutions. GPUs that are best-suited for 1080p and 1440p gaming are not always going to be the same set that’s best-suited for 4K and ultrawide, so the GPUs you’ll see in this article’s test results vary a bit from the previous article. Our intention was to quickly follow-up with a look at higher-end resolutions, and while it’s unfortunately taken longer to get this published than we would have liked, we’re glad to get it done now, so we can get back to focusing on some creator benchmarks (since there are many looking for updates). A couple of weeks ago, we took a look at 1080p and 1440p gaming on a variety of graphics cards. ![]()
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