Tuesday, September 21st 2021
AMD Radeon RX 6600 Reviews Set to Release October 13th
The AMD Radeon RX 6600 is expected to launch in October after documents received by VideoCardz reveal that reviews for the card are set to be published on October 13th. The documents reveal that board partners who will be releasing cards for review will need to have informed AMD by September 15th and can begin shipping them to reviewers on September 29th. The AMD Radeon RX 6600 will use the Navi 23 GPU with 4 Compute Units disabled for a total of 28. This will give the card 1792 Stream Processors which will be paired with 8 GB of GDDR6 memory. The documents also show that AMD is not planning to release an RX 6600 reference card so no pricing information was included. We expect that the card will be shortly available after the listed review embargo is lifted on October 13th at 9 AM EST.
Source:
VideoCardz
30 Comments on AMD Radeon RX 6600 Reviews Set to Release October 13th
I feel the need—the need for speed!
Condemning yet to be released pricing... I call it an achievement. :D
Ignoring GPU side of things, getting decent AMD notebook with nothing in it crippled is still a challenge.
Even more so in Europe.
Dell is a total embarrassment, HP finds it appropriate to use 230nit 1080p screens with decent AMD CPU in a laptop priced around 1k.
Heck, even Lenovo, which has a number of notebooks (not all though) with matching specs (Intel/AMD) rarely has anything with AMD in it in stock.
Basicly your bus can be smaller, less consuming and still have the same bandwidth compared to real 128 or 256 bits of busses.
if it ever goes back on sell to 1499 i may get it. i just really wanted a 17.3" screen :(
You might not like the prices but that is the market, buy a card or don't, either way bitching online does nothing.
Maybe can still some thunder from Nvidia if they come within spitting distance of the RTX 3060 and have it priced at $249 (hopefully more like $219). My guess is, $329 - like the RTX 3060 and performance will be about the same.
nVidia on the other hand doesn't seem to want to release 3050/3050 Ti for the desktop. Why? Maybe because production of those chips would eat into their higher priced SKUs and reduce their profits. They like the market as it is - priced sky-high, and Super GPUs will highly probably be released with a MSRP increase - so much for the "we care about gamers" garbage ...
Then again, it's also a matter of whether laptop manufacturers want to make AMD-powered laptops or not. Do you have the BOM costs at least? Even better, do you have the total costs of making a card and delivering it to a store or at least a distribution warehouse or some place? Seriously asking.
Inflation is a thing. The 200 dollar bracket is bound to move to a higher price tier one day.
Also, current market and supply chain conditions exacerbate the issue.
If you want to blame someone, blame people that accepted paying scalpers' price. They proved to companies that people were willing to pay more, way more. And companies are for profit, why would they not take the chance to make a few extra bucks? You can buy cards straight from AMD. It's just that too many people want to do the same thing and on top of that they have to fight the bots (or so it appears at least). Plus it's limited to a few regions, it's not worldwide.
But yeah, if you want to see this or the 3060 hit anywhere near MSRP, we're going to need the change to Proof of Stake to make a massive shift in GPU buyer habits!
this card is costing AMD sub 100$ to build
no wonder nvidia and amd are doing whatever they want now, because common sense and value went out of the window, 500$ consoles rocking 16 threads and playing games 4k60fps, but when it comes to PC it's okay to get 1080p card at 300$+
And I'm not seeing AMD making an even lower end RDNA2 card, because come on, this one already has only 28 CU out of the 80 that the top model has, I don't think it would make sense to go even lower. Pretty sure Steam's survey says otherwise
Please give me a valid source for that at the very least, not just mere hot air thrown around in a forum without any substance. Never mind all the other costs and the profit margins of every party involved in the process, from the making of the GPU to the guy selling it to you behind a store's counter or whatever the equivalent is for online shopping. A BOM would be a good starting point. Sony was selling those at a loss, last I knew. They don't care *that* much, because it's part of the cost of making business for them and they can recover the loss pretty quickly through all the other income from the PlayStation environment.