
In some markets like Australia, some RX 6600 cards can be had for $650 AUD, which is roughly what you'll pay for an RTX 3050. So what do you need to spend in order to enjoy today's games at respectable quality settings, while also having enough headroom to be useful for years to come?įor that, the AMD Radeon RX 6600 is the go-to option, with some models hitting $450, though most are still over $500. You're not getting much for $270 with the 6500 XT as we've just established. The Ideal Entry Point ($500+) AMD Radeon RX 6600 Though be aware, if it does hit that price in a few months from now, there's a good chance other GPUs will have also dropped in price, so make sure you check all your options before buying. For similar money, or around $270, a used Radeon 5500 XT 4GB or GTX 1650 Super are better products, so consider those instead if you find them.īut of course, if you manage to grab an RX 6500 XT for the $200 MSRP, then that's probably the way to go. This one is going to age like milk.Īlternatively, if you do have access to a heavily used market, we recommend looking at the Radeon RX 570 4GB, which can typically be had for under $200 and is arguably a better product.
#Graphic cards news 1080p#
In all honesty, we'd prefer to keep waiting or do something else with our time than PC gaming, as spending $270 on a graphics card that can't even achieve 60 fps in new games such as Cyberpunk 2077 or Dying Light 2 using the lowest possible quality settings at 1080p is a rough deal. However, there's no alternative for under $450, so if you desperately need a new graphics card and the used market is out of the question, this is it. Essentially, it's a bad product with numerous issues that costs too much for what it is. Entry-level GPU (Less than $300) Radeon RX 6500 XT at MSRP or Buy Usedįor those of you looking to spend as little as possible the cheapest new graphics card is the unfortunate Radeon RX 6500 XT. It appears things could finally start to improve, ever so slightly, and while we do have a long way to go, we understand many of you are done waiting and you just want to buy something, so what should you get? We're covering five price ranges, starting from the bottom, let's get to it. During that time we recommended to hold out if you could, and we also spent quite a bit of time investigating second hand alternatives, though admittedly there's not been much appeal there either.

We saw the RTX 4080 (12GB) again in January 2023 at Nvidia’s CES announcement, this time in the form of the RTX 4070 Ti, complete with a more palatable price tag of $799.It's been two whole years since we put together a guide for the best GPUs you can buy, and that's because for two years now the market has been in complete shambles. Having two GPUs with the 4080 designation is confusing,” it said in a post on its site. “The RTX 4080 12GB is a fantastic graphics card, but it’s not named right.

The difference was so dramatic that many online gamers suggested it wasn’t deserving of the 4080 branding – and it seems Nvidia agreed.įollowing the backlash, Nvidia confirmed in October 2022 that it’d be “unlaunching” the 12GB model.

The 12GB model also had fewer CUDA cores, Tensor-TFLOPs, RT-TFLOPs and Shader TFLOPs than the 16GB model. The problem is that, given the branding, you’d assume the only difference between the models was the amount of VRAM on offer – but you’d be wrong. While Nvidia initially announced two variants of the RTX 4080 – one with 12GB of GDDR6X VRAM and another with 16GB – the 12GB model was met with plenty of backlash from the gaming community.
