Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2006
- Messages
- 19,578 (2.86/day)
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System Name | White DJ in Detroit |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5 5600 |
Motherboard | Asrock B450M-HDV |
Cooling | Be Quiet! Pure Rock 2 |
Memory | 2 x 16GB Kingston Fury 3400mhz |
Video Card(s) | XFX 6950XT Speedster MERC 319 |
Storage | Kingston A400 240GB | WD Black SN750 2TB |WD Blue 1TB x 2 | Toshiba P300 2TB | Seagate Expansion 8TB |
Display(s) | Samsung U32J590U 4K + BenQ GL2450HT 1080p |
Case | Fractal Design Define R4 |
Audio Device(s) | Plantronics 5220, Nektar SE61 keyboard |
Power Supply | Corsair RM850x v3 |
Mouse | Logitech G602 |
Keyboard | Cherry MX Board 1.0 TKL Brown |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | Rimworld 4K ready! |
Not what I meant. I mean it is sad because once again we have a generation where AMD is extremely far behind in power and heat, and can't compete in the high end performance segment. We have to wait for Vega to come out to get competition performance wise to the 1070/1080, and by then GP102 will be ready and faster. But GP102 cards will be overpriced because they have no competition... Lack of competition is bad, and means we as the consumer loose. I was hoping RX 480 would at least come close to the 1070 to warrant a slight price cut from nVidia, but nope... Even in crossfire, two of these can't compete with a 1070.
Plus, it annoys me that AMD has gone quite a bit out of spec on the power consumption, pulling beyond spec from the PCI-E slot and PCI-E 6-pin. I've seen this cause the 24-pin connector melt.
The only way Vega will beat anything is clearly if it pulls several million watts. Which is fine, IMO, if the price is very competitive (partly because PSU's last forever compared to GPU's and the high end gamers generally sit on big PSU's). I'm betting it won't be though. :/