Tuesday, February 6th 2024
AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT Now $100 Cheaper Than GeForce RTX 4070 Ti SUPER
Prices of the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT graphics card hit new lows, with a Sapphire custom-design card selling for $699 with a coupon discount on Newegg. This puts its price a whole $100 cheaper (12.5% cheaper) than the recently announced NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Ti SUPER. The most interesting part of the story is that the RX 7900 XT is technically from a segment above. Originally launched at $900, the RX 7900 XT is recommended by AMD for 4K Ultra HD gaming with ray tracing; while the RTX 4070 Ti SUPER is officially recommended by NVIDIA for maxed out gaming with ray tracing at 1440p, although throughout our testing, we found the card to be capable of 4K Ultra HD gaming.
The Radeon RX 7900 XT offers about the same performance as the RTX 4070 Ti SUPER, averaging 1% higher than it in our testing, at the 4K Ultra HD resolution. At 1440p, the official stomping ground of the RTX 4070 Ti SUPER, the RX 7900 XT comes out 2% faster. These are, of course pure raster 3D workloads. In our testing with ray tracing enabled, the RTX 4070 Ti SUPER storms past the RX 7900 XT, posting 23% higher performance at 4K Ultra HD, and 21% higher performance at 1440p.
Source:
VideoCardz
The Radeon RX 7900 XT offers about the same performance as the RTX 4070 Ti SUPER, averaging 1% higher than it in our testing, at the 4K Ultra HD resolution. At 1440p, the official stomping ground of the RTX 4070 Ti SUPER, the RX 7900 XT comes out 2% faster. These are, of course pure raster 3D workloads. In our testing with ray tracing enabled, the RTX 4070 Ti SUPER storms past the RX 7900 XT, posting 23% higher performance at 4K Ultra HD, and 21% higher performance at 1440p.
132 Comments on AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT Now $100 Cheaper Than GeForce RTX 4070 Ti SUPER
Unless we're talking 700 VS 600 FPS difference. No eSports connoiseur in the world can tell the difference. This is purely the "skill issue" territory.
Look at the UE5 games that push RT (or well, lumen, but that comes with the same performance impact) and run terribly, GPUs are simply not ready yet, we have a ways to go before we can competently deliver meaningful RT at acceptable framerates on most games. See alan wake 2, a newer game that has an RT implementation that one would consider meaningful. Look at the performance, we are not there yet.
Competitive titles, though, consist of simplified graphics, allies and enemies. Occasionally it's a tad more advanced than that (hostages, flags, bombs etc) but you got it. And one little cheeky lag spike means you aim oil drums instead of your nemesis' head and you get shot instead. And you're not playing such games for fun, your main goal is money. Having a better PC means having more potential $$$. That said, you need to disable EVERYTHING that spends PC resources and can be disabled without Windows going BSoD and dedicate every single TFLOPS to the eSport you're playing. And also getting as low latency system as humanly possible. That's why Windows 11 has low popularity on this scene. It's just slower than 10. Doesn't matter by how much, the fact it's slower is enough.
The reasoning is the same as to why football players and other athletes buy the best gear possible. They just need to eliminate EVERYTHING that can prevent them from showing the ultimate performance. Getting noticeable improvement and still being at 60ish FPS is accessible at 800+ USD now. Of course it's very expensive but it was only accessible at 1500+ USD last gen and wasn't a thing in 2018. We're getting there slowly but surely. My bet RT will basically be a given in a dozen years from now.
You are making the best argument for buying the 7900XTX for all gaming scenarios.
And these companies (AMD, intel, Nvidia) are obliged to follow some social goals, as well, especially when they develop technologies which serve for the normal functioning of the society.
That's the idea which the top managers can't get because it's out of their understanding of the world, if you want, as a whole.
It's not sustainable to ask for ever increasing profit when participating in critical for the society functions. Yeah, how would you compare a GeForce 4 Ti in 2002 for 320$ against an RX 6700 XT in 2024 for same money?
Don't you get more for less? What's your idea? It is a setting.
Secondly, society functions without high-end graphics cards just fine, it has for millennia. They certainly have an effect on society, but they're not necessary by any means. Therefore, AMD, Intel and Nvidia are not obliged to lower their profit margins as long as customers are happy to pay up. Why would they? If you could sell a loaf of bread for 100 bucks, tell me you wouldn't. ;)
Zeitgeist plays a huge role here. We've just escaped an era where the sky was the limit. Free money, life on debt was just fine, and then bubbles started bursting, pandemic happened, and crypto surged as an artifact of an era we were actually moving out of. Crypto was also built on the sky is the limit. Today, its not quite the lucrative business it was supposed to become - it lives on the sidelines of the economy, if even that.
Chips have followed a similar trajectory. For 30 years or more, there was low hanging fruit. That's gone now. Graphics, similarly, have advanced at a similar pace. Low hanging fruit is gone. A lot of the recent developments are really not developments, but disruptions to set a new status quo. RT is an example of that in gaming. 'Let's make a new bar to place/compare cards on, so it looks like we're still giving more'. Meanwhile, raster perf, the basis under all performance, is no longer advancing as fast as it used to and the price per FPS is getting stagnant gen to gen.
Even the planet follows a trajectory like that: humanity has clearly peaked, and the jury is still convening whether we are in decline or just slowly keep climbing as a species. But realistically all signs are red: climate, resources, population... we've exploded and we're fat, bloated, and fill societies with frivolities and wasteful practices. Are we happier though? I don't think so. More people than ever in therapy of some kind or another. Healthcare expenses explode like our bellies do. Wealth makes lazy. Lazy makes unhealthy. We're getting stagnant gen to gen, but fatter. Top seller and recent hype of 2024? A miracle medicine that promises weight loss. Go figure.
So do you really keep getting more for less, or is this just a matter of perception? What IS more?
And I am in no way saying that a 7900XTX is faster than a 4090, of course it's not. I was just illustrating a point, picking a card on a certain game or criteria is pointless. You picture illustrates the point, who would buy a 7900XTX based on that quite obvious outlier but then we could also go the other way with this.
Using this cherry picked image most people would look and say the 7900XTX is a better RT card than a 4090 in one of the most popular recent games at the resolutions most people play at. It's not, it's just a fantasy to say that on one game based on one image on one persons opinion. See how we can all cherry pick.
I tend to look at all reviews and also user comments/experience. Maybe other people should do the same.
The human factor determines your performance. Irrespective of equipment. Equipment can only nudge that performance slightly higher. The amount of gamers that are pro enough to even get that nudge and prove it helps them is certainly not equal to the amount of supposed pro's that think they get it.
Rigorous training and building muscle memory is where its at. This means a lot more than playing a lot of CS. It means actually doing IRL sports to improve your gaming, short sessions of gaming, and full control.
Warzone is not even in the top 10 most play game on Steam, I generally don't give a rat ass about it, until someone point out that AMD is better in Warzone that is.
But I am also running on coffee and the worst sleep I've had in my entire life, so perhaps I am just delirious.
Edit: Let's see what our cherry harvest has to offer (peep the i9 results, that one is more likely to be CPU limited)
Also, some say this isn't a "realistic" test. But recently Gamers Nexus made a latency test with LDAT, and as aresult, the 7900XT had the total latency even lower, than 4090 and other nVidia counterparts. So... it's up to each individual, whether one decides, if they matter more the "theoretical" latency, or the final, general one.
I own both by the way, a 4080 and 7900XTX. Certain games suit one over the other. I'm not a competitive games player but in my experience my 7900XTX is faster than my 4080 in Warzone. The general consensus is that it's also faster than a 4090. Do I listen to one guy or the thousands upon thousands of other reviews or experiences that generally say the 7900XTX is faster.
As demonstrated in my post above, in Spider-Man the 7900XTX in the most popular resolutions matches or beat a 4090 in RT. So it must be the same in RT in everything. Nope, not even close in the majority of RT/PT titles. I can accept that. To me it's not a pissing contest. It's a certain card does a better job in a certain game that i'm playing at the time so i'll use the relevant card.
At the present moment in time to me a 7900XTX is a more rounded card. In the future the 4080 may become that when more games come out that suit it's characteristics. But by then new cards will be out anyway and the world spins on with people picking a side that does not give a monkey's chuff about them. I have the same attitude to them as they to me. This is a graphics card, not a loved one. I don't think you know what a outlier is. The outlier is not the game as other reviews/comments show the 7900XTX is faster generally speaking than a 4090 but the benchmark/image you used. It is way off what most people get.
So yeah, maybe more people prefer GPUs that can do more than rasterizarion after all.
I have disputed your use of a cherry pick though and the use of the word outlier. But you seem to have run out of room so go to sales. Like i've said before, I don't care for either, I own both. Swings and roundabouts on either side. But I do call out cherry pickers.