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System Name | Tiny the White Yeti |
---|---|
Processor | 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSI MAG Mortar b650m wifi |
Cooling | CPU: Thermalright Peerless Assassin / Case: Phanteks T30-120 x3 |
Memory | 32GB Corsair Vengeance 30CL6000 |
Video Card(s) | ASRock RX7900XT Phantom Gaming |
Storage | Lexar NM790 4TB + Samsung 850 EVO 1TB + Samsung 980 1TB + Crucial BX100 250GB |
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Case | Lian Li A3 mATX White |
Audio Device(s) | Harman Kardon AVR137 + 2.1 |
Power Supply | EVGA Supernova G2 750W |
Mouse | Steelseries Aerox 5 |
Keyboard | Lenovo Thinkpad Trackpoint II |
VR HMD | HD 420 - Green Edition ;) |
Software | W11 IoT Enterprise LTSC |
Benchmark Scores | Over 9000 |
Not really, its an issue that is present in the market right now for 8GB cards. Whether you meet that issue in your regular gaming on an 8GB card is a combination of personal preferences, budget and financial/upgrade possibilities, the resolution you play on, etc etc.Well we are reaching the end of 2023 and there are less than a handful of games which are using too much VRAM, not to mention those games are pretty far from being must-play. Needless to say the VRAM issue has been blown out of proportion in a typical fashion by Steve (AMD Unboxed channel).
Fact remains there are quite a few games that exceed 8GB today. What you call 'too much' is a colored statement, fact is, they use it, so if you want to play said game, you'll need it, or you'll compromise in any which way to get it playable, and that compromise might dive under your expectations for what is good gaming.
Two years ago, that problem didn't exist.
I know, its real nice to be able to think in 'us vs them' to make the world simple, but that's not how the world works. And it never will.
Also, given Nvidia's history wrt VRAM gen-to-gen, I think the odd one out here is Nvidia, not AMD. AMD is just doing a logical VRAM scaling gen-to-gen, this holds true for RDNA1-3. Nvidia is cutting away hardware and then the story is 'AMD bad' Do you even logic. Its very clear Nvidia is approaching the market to obsolete its own product every gen so you buy the latest, they have 3 angles now: DLSS versions, RT being an extra VRAM requirement, and cutting down on VRAM along the way. Again: you don't need to be a rocket scientist to put two and two together. Is AMD pushing their VRAM story in marketing along the way? Of course, because that's Nvidia's weakness. All I see here is consensus about what's happening
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