To me, it is a bad card as well. Performance wise, if the system that you are using it has a PCI-E 4.0 slot, then you will get the full performance of the card. And even if you get 100% of what you paid for, you are comparing a GPU that is 2 generations back, launched 6+ years ago with likely no driver optimisation by now. The improvement in performance is "meh" to say the least. And the difference in 2GB VRAM will also hurt performance at higher graphical settings. The story is worst when you compare both cards on the same system that only has PCI-E 3.0.not possible.
DAG size of Ethereum is 4.7GB. It won't reach 6GB till 2024.
The 6500XT is already a faster card (for gaming) than the 1060 6GB. And you think it's terrible.
A hypothetical 6GB 6500 XT card would earn around $550, whereas the 4GB version is useless, because, 4GB.
There is absolutely zero chance of a 6GB card for $150-$200.
You can have a hopefully slightly better 4GB card, or you can have something costing $400++. Those are your choices.
Objectively, the performance is decent if certain condition is met. But this is a card that I will only recommend if someone must buy a GPU because their existing GPU is dead or dying. For users for GTX 1060 6GB and RX 570/ 580, they should just continue to use their card until the opportunity presents itself to buy a better GPU at their target price, or until their GPU bites the dust. From an attractiveness standpoint, the RX 6500 series is a fail.
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