Monday, April 25th 2022
AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT Surfaces on GFXBench, 2% - 12% Faster than RX 6700 XT
The upcoming AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT has recently appeared in a benchmark listing on the GFXBench website where it performed 2% faster than the AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT. The Radeon RX 6750 XT is an upcoming refresh of the RX 6700 XT featuring faster GDDR6 memory running at 18 Gbps and increased clock speeds. The RX 6750 XT achieved a score of 366.5 FPS in the single GFXBench 5.0 Aztec Ruins High Tier off-screen entry which is 2% faster than the average RX 6700 XT score at 362.2 FPS for the same test. This initial test is not likely to be a representative sample of the card's performance but we would expect further tests to leak in the coming days. The AMD Radeon RX 6750XT is set to be officially unveiled on May 10th and will gradually replace existing RX 6700 XT offerings.
Update: The card has also been tested in various other GFXBench 5.0 tests including Aztec Ruins Normal Tier, Manhattan, and T-Rex where it achieves scores 6% - 12% above the RX 6700 XT.
Sources:
GFXBench 1, GFXBench 2, VideoCardz
Update: The card has also been tested in various other GFXBench 5.0 tests including Aztec Ruins Normal Tier, Manhattan, and T-Rex where it achieves scores 6% - 12% above the RX 6700 XT.
34 Comments on AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT Surfaces on GFXBench, 2% - 12% Faster than RX 6700 XT
6700XT Game Clock = 2424MHz
6750XT Game Clock = 2518MHz
If you want to turn your 6700XT into a 6750XT, just increase the power limit and fan speeds by 15% and overclock it. Well done, you've 'upgraded'!
The Italian store listing confirms AMD’s Radeon RX 6×50 upgraded versions of RDNA2 graphics (newsbeezer.com)
2 % were AT FIRST in one leak, in the meantime there are also leaks of 10% - 22% improvement (depending on the test).
Here is a link - posted 24 hours ago on PCGH :
www.pcgameshardware.de/Grafikkarten-Grafikkarte-97980/News/AMD-Radeon-RX-6750XT-Leistungszuwachs-doch-groesser-als-vermutet-1393709/
"In Aztec Ruins Normal Tier soll die RX 6750XT demnach 10,5 % schneller als die RX 6700XT sein, während der Vorsprung in Manhattan bei ca. 22 respektive 6,5 Prozent liegt. Bei T-Rex soll die neue Grafikkarte 23 bzw. 12 Prozent schneller als ihre Vorgängerin sein, was anders als eine zweiprozentige Leistungssteigerung, die zuvor angenommen wurde, auch den Wegfall der Radeon RX 6800 erklären würde."
I really hope the sarcasm is clear there. We'll know the prices of these GPUs when they are launched (MSRP) and when they hit stores (street pricing). Until then, anything else is utterly meaningless.
As for these results: I don't expect a huge performance gain from these refreshes, but GFXBench Aztec ruins is also likely a worst-case scenario test, being lightweight enough to minimize differences between any decent performance GPU. There's a reason nobody uses 3DMark Ice Storm to compare high end GPUs - too lightweight a test makes it unreliable at high performance levels.
Face it, you cant just spray "muh regulation" at every problem andexpect a fix. The issue here is people are buying them at $1000+. They're ins tock, that doesnt mean they're not selling, and going for $1000 means near $400 pure profit for the store involved, little to no reason to lower prices even if sales are cut in half.
Seems to me, nVidia messed up the amount of vram and AMD the bandwidth.
ETH mining hasn't stopped, and the 6800XT mines as fast as a RTX3080 at 40W less, which makes it considerably more desirable to the bulk of the "demand" in the market than the €1000 RTX3080.
If you want a good value gaming card, you need to look for something that mines ETH poorly, and ideally sucks at RVN and ERGO algorithms, too. This is why the 6700XT did so well compared to the 6900XT.
It only has half the cores of the 6900XT but it performs at 60-75% of the 6900XT because it has 75% of the memory bandwidth. For its class of card it has way more bandwidth per core than anything else AMD has launched this generation. Don't get your hopes up too much about the 6850XT and 6950XT though, 18Gbps VRAM is barely a 10% improvement.
*some cards have had problems with these FX models.
Also, you forget that higher TDP means more heat, more noise and more concerns about the longevity.
So, no..
What's new is that since the 6700XT was released, 18Gbps GDDR6 is more widely available, not that the 6700XT needed extra memory bandwidth, but I feel AMD are clutching at straws for this zero-effort refresh so specifying the current mainstream VRAM speed is at least some numerical change that doesn't actually have any effect on the amount of work they (as the GPU maker, not the VRAM maker) need to worry about.