- Joined
- Dec 6, 2016
- Messages
- 155 (0.05/day)
System Name | The cube |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5700g |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B550M Aorus Elite |
Cooling | Thermalright ARO-M14 |
Memory | 16GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3800mhz |
Video Card(s) | Powercolor Radeon RX 6900XT Red Devil |
Storage | Kingston 1TB NV2| 2x 1TB 2.5" Hitachi 7200rpm | 2TB 2.5" Toshiba USB 3.0 |
Display(s) | Samsung Odyssey G5 32" + LG 24MP59G 24" |
Case | Chieftec CI-02B-OP |
Audio Device(s) | Creative X-Fi Extreme Audio PCI-E (SB1040) |
Power Supply | Corsair HX1200 |
Mouse | Razer Basilisk X Hyperspeed |
Keyboard | Razer Ornata Chroma |
Software | Win10 x64 PRO |
Benchmark Scores | Mobile: Asus Strix Advantage G713QY | Ryzen 7 5900HX | 16GB Micron 3200MHz CL21 | RX 6800M 12GB | |
While the FX series did perform poorly vs radeon 9xxx, they were by no means bad cards. My 5700XT (Leadtek A360TD 128MB) allowed me to play almost any game I wanted up to 1280x1024 at solid framerates, and I got it cheaper than the competing 9600XT at the time. In fact it was priced close to the 9600se which had a 64 bit memory bus. The 9550 was not out yet or was not available in my country at the time. My Leadtek A360TD ran a 425Mhz core clock and 275MHz (550 effective) memory - and boy was it fast compared to the radeon 7500 I had before it. If I remember correctly I payed 70$ for the card and traded in my radeon 7500 (witch I now regret because I can't seem to find a working example for my collection). Not a bad deal, especially considering I was in high school and my only income was part time jobs.@kanecvr Tbh FX5000 series was probably Nvidia's greatest dud ever.
While I have been in the green camp for a long while (dating back to Linux support issues), I had no problems recommending ATI/AMD cards to friends when they made sense.
I never cared (and still don't) about bragging rights, or who has the fastest cards - manufacturer X or Y - I always found this kind of argument childish - especially since none of my friends could afford the top-of-the-line models from any company. It's an argument akin to "my dad can bet up your dad". What I cared about is playing games, and hardware I could afford.
I belong on that "club". At the same time I worry about if one day a part, in this case, the GPU) dies, what would be a decent upgrade.
I'm going to stick to second hand hardware when that happens.