I second that request. There's too much talk of the 2060 being the "cheapest RTX card" and not enough about whether it's actually a good experience. It would be helpful to know what the minimum investment is for a decent experience.
By synthetic, I'm assuming you mean compute? If so, the answer is yes. AMD has not dropped a major driver update for Navi since the launch, so nothing has changed.
The Division 2 4K 99th percentile results seem to be mislabeled (or there was something wrong in the test). The RX 5700XT and GTX 1080 are showing a higher 99th percentile value than the average.
That's NVIDIA's factory-overclocked card. $999 is supposed to be the MSRP for reference-clocked cards (but good luck getting one for under $1149 right now).
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GreenReaper - Wednesday, July 24, 2019 - link
The price is the price. If you want to help clarify the relative prices, it'd be better to use a visual aid.Spunjji - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
Entirely in favour of rounding, here - I think SuperiorSpecimen has the right idea about how to do it.hosps - Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - link
Any chance in seeing an RTX enabled comparison between the various card levels?Spunjji - Friday, July 26, 2019 - link
I second that request. There's too much talk of the 2060 being the "cheapest RTX card" and not enough about whether it's actually a good experience. It would be helpful to know what the minimum investment is for a decent experience.DanNeely - Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - link
Are the synthetic tests without a 5700 score still due to lingering driver problems, or have you just not had time to try testing again?Ryan Smith - Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - link
By synthetic, I'm assuming you mean compute? If so, the answer is yes. AMD has not dropped a major driver update for Navi since the launch, so nothing has changed.Ferrari_Freak - Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - link
The Division 2 4K 99th percentile results seem to be mislabeled (or there was something wrong in the test). The RX 5700XT and GTX 1080 are showing a higher 99th percentile value than the average.Ryan Smith - Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - link
Whoops. Fixed that in the source data, but it didn't propagate to the graphs. It's fully fixed this time.designgears - Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - link
https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/geforce/graphics-card...That shows MSRP at $1199.00, not $999.00.
Ryan Smith - Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - link
That's NVIDIA's factory-overclocked card. $999 is supposed to be the MSRP for reference-clocked cards (but good luck getting one for under $1149 right now).