Best Graphics Cards for Gaming in 2021

admin

The best graphics cards are the lifeblood of any gaming PC — they’re responsible for converting all of those zeroes and ones into stunning pixels on your screen.While there’s no single solution that’s right for everyone, we’re here to sort out the must haves from the wanna bes.Some want the fastest graphics card, others the…

imageThe best graphics cards are the lifeblood of any gaming PC — they’re responsible for converting all of those zeroes and ones into stunning pixels on your screen.While there’s no single solution that’s right for everyone, we’re here to sort out the must haves from the wanna bes.Some want the fastest graphics card, others the best value, and many are looking for the best card at a given price.Balancing performance, price, features, and efficiency is important because no other component impacts your gaming experience as much as the graphics card.The tentative good news is that, with China’s crackdown on cryptocurrency mining , prices on GPUs have started to drop.

Our GPU pricing index saw a 15% dip last month, with more to come.Some analysts even think we might see ‘normal’ pricing before the end of the year, though that’s probably wishful thinking as demand from gamers remains high.Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 3080 Ti and GeForce RTX 3070 Ti have now launched, leaving us generally underwhelmed.The 3080 Ti is about 10% faster than the RTX 3080, but costs 71% more (going by MSRP, which is really all we can do for now).The 3070 Ti meanwhile is about 10% faster than the 3070 and costs 20% more, but also increases power consumption by over 30%.

At least both cards provide additional options, and with Nvidia’s hashrate limiter they shouldn’t be as enticing to miners.We still haven’t seen desktop variants of the RTX 3050 Ti and RTX 3050 , which are going after the laptop market first — probably because that’s a lower volume market than desktop cards costing less than $300.Wafers remain in short supply, basically.Of course, performance with only 4GB VRAM may not be all that we’d like to see.From AMD, we’re also waiting to see RX 6700 or some other form of trimmed-down Navi 22, with RX 6600 and RX 6500 cards based on Navi 23 also set to arrive at some point — specs are already confirmed thanks to the Radeon Pro W6600 announcement.

Indications are the RX 6700/6600 XT/6600 (one or all three) should arrive in August.

More importantly for Team Red is the recent public launch of FSR, FidelityFX Super Resolution .A GPU-agnostic upscaling algorithm that competes against DLSS sounds great, and performance and image quality at the higher settings are good.Now we just need for it to get used in more games, preferrably stuff that lots of people are playing.While GPUs are still hard to find in the US, mining profitability has dropped substantially in the past month, so maybe we’ll start edging back toward normalcy.Also, Nvidia has released LHR (low hash rate) variants of the RTX 3080, 3070, and 3060 Ti now, and the non-LHR variants are being phased out, so all Nvidia Ampere GPUs other than the RTX 3090 will be even less desirable for mining purposes (assuming the limiter doesn’t get cracked).

We’re going to list the best graphics cards that are theoretically available right now, along with their nominal prices.The latest additions to our list are the GeForce RTX 3060 12GB and Radeon RX 6700 XT .Both sold out and are now on eBay for exorbitant prices.If you’re desparate for a new GPU, you could maybe justify paying 25% more than the launch price, but double or triple the MSRP is simply too much.If you need to upgrade, we recommend taking a look at pre-built gaming PCs instead.Or just wait, but prices might not get back to anything close to ‘normal’ until some time in 2022.We test and review all the major GPUs, and we’ve ranked every graphics card in our GPU Benchmarks hierarchy based purely on performance.

We’ve also done extensive testing of graphics card power consumption , using proper hardware, and we’ve looked at the broader AMD vs Nvidia GPUs breakdown.More recently, our Radeon RX 6800 XT and GeForce RTX 3060 Ti launch articles have included test results for the latest GPUs running on Core i9-9900K, Core i9-10900K, and Ryzen 9 5900X.Mostly, the three CPUs are pretty close, though things vary depending on the game and settings (and motherboard firmware and RAM).Here we cut things down to a succinct list of the best graphics cards you can currently buy.Choosing the Best Graphics Card for You We’ve provided a dozen options for the best graphics cards, recognizing that there’s plenty of potential overlap.The latest generation GPUs consist of Nvidia’s Ampere architecture cards and AMD’s RDNA2 architecture offerings.You can check our launch reviews of the GeForce RTX 3090 , GeForce RTX 3080 Ti , GeForce RTX 3080 , GeForce RTX 3070 Ti , GeForce RTX 3070 , GeForce RTX 3060 Ti , and GeForce RTX 3060 12GB for Nvidia, along with AMD’s Radeon RX 6900 XT , Radeon RX 6800 XT and RX 6800 , and https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-radeon-rx-6700-xt-announcement-march-3 .

RDNA2 brought ray tracing support to Team Red for the first time and greatly improved performance compared to the previous generation GPUs.That’s eleven new GPUs in about as many months, and we’ll likely see additional options using scaled down GA106 and Navi 22 GPUs in the near future.Theoretically, cards like the RTX 3070 and RX 6800 cost less than half as much as the previous generation RTX 2080 Ti, and generally match or beat it on performance.Meanwhile, the RX 6800 XT and RTX 3080 are 30 to 35% faster than the 2080 Ti for less money, and the 3090 is 10-20% faster than the 3080 (at more than twice the price).You can also see how the RTX 3080 scales with a wider range of CPUs .

Hint: You’ll want something made in the past few years, preferably with at least 6-cores and 12-threads.Unfortunately, that’s only in theory, as cyptocurrency mining combined with an already limited supply have caused a massive jump in GPU prices.Our advice: Don’t pay more today for yesterday’s hardware.If you want an RTX 30-series or RX 6000-series graphics card, be patient and you’ll eventually be able to buy one at close to the official MSRP.If you already own a decent GPU, stick with it — or sell it for a premium and save the money until prices come down (assuming you have a spare you can live with in the interim).

If your main goal is gaming, you can’t forget about the CPU.Getting the best possible gaming GPU won’t help you much if your CPU is under-powered and/or out of date.So be sure to check out the Best Gaming CPUs page, as well as our CPU Benchmarks to make sure you have the right CPU for the level of gaming you’re looking to achieve.Our current recommendations reflect the changing GPU market, factoring in all of the above details.The GPUs are ordered mostly by performance, but price, features, and efficiency are still factors so in a few cases a slightly slower card may be ranked higher.

There’s been a massive shakeup at the top of the performance rankings already, and provided you can find the various cards in stock, these are the best graphics cards.Quick Shopping Tips When buying a graphics card , consider the following: • Resolution: The more pixels you’re pushing, the more performance you need.You don’t need a top-of-the-line GPU to game at 1080p .• PSU: Make sure that your power supply has enough juice and the right 6- and/or 8-pin connector(s).For example, Nvidia recommends a 650-watt PSU for the RTX 2070 Super , and you’ll need two 8-pin and/or 6-pin PEG connectors.• Video Memory: A 4GB card is the minimum right now, 6GB models are better, and 8GB or more is strongly recommended.

• FreeSync or G-Sync? Either variable refresh rate technology will synchronize your GPU’s frame rate with your screen’s refresh rate.Nvidia supports G-Sync and G-Sync Compatible displays (for recommendations, see our Best Gaming Monitors list), while AMD’s FreeSync tech works with Radeon cards.• Ray Tracing and DLSS: The latest graphics cards support ray tracing , which can be used to enhance the visuals.DLSS provides intelligent upscaling and anti-aliasing to boost performance with similar image quality, but it’s only on Nvidia RTX cards.

|GPU||Performance Rank||Value Rank (fps/$)| |1 (152.7 fps)||12 ($1,499)| |2 (148.1fps)||11 ($999)| |3 (142.8 fps)||9 ($649)| |4 (142.1 fps)||10 ($699)| |5 (127.3 fps)||8 ($579)| |6 (116.6 fps)||7 ($499)| |7 (112.0 fps)||6 ($479)| |8 (106.3 fps)||1 ($399)| |9 (83.6 fps)||4 ($329)| |10 (57.9 fps)||5 ($229)| |11 (43.5 fps)||2 ($159)| |12 (43.3)||3 ($169)| [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090] [AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT] [AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080] [AMD Radeon RX 6800] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070] [AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 12GB] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Super] [AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT 4GB] Note: Prices on most of the graphics cards are seriously messed up right now.We’ve listed the official MSRPs, which is what we would expect to pay under normal circumstances.You shouldn’t pay significantly more than the above prices, and nearly all of the top GPUs remain out of stock.While we sorted the above list in order of performance, we’ve sorted the cards below based on performance as well as our own subjective rankings.

We look at performance, price, power, and features and then adjust things accordingly, though opinions naturally differ.Plus, it’s very hard to know how to rank anything given the current prices.

Best Graphics Cards for Gaming 2021 1.GeForce RTX 3080 Best Graphics Card Overall, for 4K and More GPU: Ampere (GA102) | GPU Cores: 8704 | Boost Clock: 1,710 MHz | Video RAM: 10GB GDDR6X 19 Gbps | TDP: 320 watts Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 3080 sports the new and improved Ampere architecture .It’s over 30% faster than the previous gen 2080 Ti, for $500 less.The new RTX 3080 Ti didn’t manage to supplant the incumbent, thanks to its significantly higher pricing.

If you’re serious about maxing out all the graphics settings and you want to play at 4K or 1440p, this is the card to get — it’s mostly overkill for 1080p gaming, though enabling all ray tracing effects in games that support the feature makes 1080p still reasonable.If you skipped the first round of RTX GPUs, the RTX 30-series might finally get you you on board the ray tracing train.

With potentially double the ray tracing performance of Turing, and games like Cyberpunk 2077 using even more ray tracing effects, the RTX 3080 is your best bet at playing games in all their ray traced glory without nuking the piggy bank.Ampere also brings improved tensor cores for DLSS, a technology we’re bound to see more of in future games now that it doesn’t require per-game training by a supercomputer.We’re seeing a lot more games with DLSS 2.0 these days, helped by the fact that it’s basically a toggle and UI update to get it working in Unreal Engine.Nvidia’s RT and DLSS performance are also quite a bit faster than what you get from AMD’s new RX 6000 cards, which is a good thing as Nvidia sometimes falls behind in traditional rasterization performance (which is what our raw numbers are based on).The biggest problem with RTX 3080 by far is going to be finding one in stock, at prices that aren’t straight up terrible.

Given the high price of the 3080 Ti, though, this remains our best pick for a fast GPU right now.Read: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Review 2.Radeon RX 6800 XT Best AMD GPU, Forget About DLSS GPU: Navi 21 XT | GPU Cores: 4608 | Boost Clock: 2,250 MHz | Video RAM: 16GB GDDR6 16 Gbps | TDP: 300 watts AMD’s https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-teases-big-navi-rx-6900-xt/news/amd-rx-6000-rdna-2-big-navi-gpus-revealed is the best card for Team Red.

The RX Radeon 6900 XT is technically about 5-7 percent faster, but it costs 54 percent more.That’s not a great deal, at all, especially since you don’t get more VRAM or any other extras.The RX 6800 XT provides a massive boost in performance and features relative to the previous generation RX 5700 XT.It adds ray tracing support (via DirectX Raytracing or VulkanRT), and is 70-90% faster across our test suite.

The GPU was affectionately dubbed ‘Big Navi’ prior to launch by the enthusiast community, and we got exactly what we wanted.Navi 21 is over twice the size of Navi 10, with twice the shader cores and twice the RAM.Clock speeds are also boosted into the 2.1-2.3 GHz range (depending on the card model), the highest clocks we’ve ever seen from a reference GPU by about 300 MHz.And AMD did all this without substantially increasing power requirements: The RX 6800 XT has a 300W TDP, slightly lower than the RTX 3080’s 320W TDP.

A big part of AMD’s performance comes thanks to the massive 128MB Infinity Cache.It improves the effective bandwidth by 119% (according to AMD).We’re confident that few if any games in the coming years are going to need more than 16GB, so the 6800 XT is in a great position in that area.What’s not to like? Well, the ray tracing performance is a bit mediocre.

Maybe it’s because current games are more likely to be optimized for Nvidia’s RTX GPUs, but overall the 6800 XT is just barely ahead of the RTX 3070 in ray tracing performance, and there are several games where it falls behind by up to 25%.And that’s without turning on DLSS, which even in Quality mode can improve performance of RTX cards by 20-40% (sometimes more).AMD is working on https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-promises-open-source-fidelityfx-super-resolution-dlss-alternative to compete with DLSS, but it’s not here yet and it’s very much needed.Read: AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT Review 3.

GeForce RTX 3090 Fastest Graphics Card, Great for Creators GPU: Ampere (GA102) | GPU Cores: 10496 | Boost Clock: 1,695 MHz | Video RAM: 24GB GDDR6X 19.5 Gbps | TDP: 350 watts For some, the best card is the fastest card — pricing be damned! Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 3090 caters to this category of user.At more than double the price of the RTX 3080, performance is only moderately better (10-15%) in most workloads.It’s basically a replacement for the Titan RTX, at a still extreme price.Which is fine if that’s what you’re after — the 12GB RTX 3080 Ti doesn’t reduce the price enough to shake things up.The RTX 3090 is likely to reign as Nvidia’s top GPU for a while as well.It sports nearly a complete GA102 chip, based off the Ampere architecture , so there’s not really room for a new Titan card.Nvidia has said as much as well, that the 3090 brings Titan-class performance and features (specifically the 24GB VRAM) into the GeForce brand.If you simply must have the fastest graphics card available, that’s the RTX 3090.

It’s not just about gaming, of course.The RTX 3090 is the only GeForce Ampere with NVLink support, which is arguably more useful for professional apps and GPU compute than SLI.The 24GB of GDDR6X memory is also helpful in a variety of content creation applications.Blender for example frequently showed 30% higher performance compared to the 3080, and over twice the performance of the Titan RTX.

Just watch out for lower than expected performance in some of the SPECviewperf 13 apps, where Titan RTX has additional features turned on in its drivers that aren’t enabled for GeForce cards.AMD’s RX 6900 XT challenges the RTX 3090, and in traditional rasterization it’s competitive.It also gets some wins in a few SPECviewperf tests.But if you want the absolute fastest graphics card right now, Nvidia wins, especially if you run games with ray tracing and DLSS enabled.

Read: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090 Review 4.GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Best Bang for the Buck Graphics Card GPU: Ampere (GA104) | GPU Cores: 4864 | Boost Clock: 1,665 MHz | Video RAM: 8GB GDDR6 14 Gbps | TDP: 200 watts Nvidia’s Ampere march continues with what might just be the best of the bunch.The GeForce RTX 3060 Ti has all the same features as the other 30-series GPUs, with a starting price of just $399.In theory, of course, as it naturally sold out just as quickly as all the other new graphics cards.The 3060 Ti ends up beating the previous gen 2080 Super in performance, winning every test we ran.It’s also only about 9 percent slower than the 3070 but costs 20 percent less.If you’re still sitting on a GTX series or similar GPU, like a GTX 1070 or RX Vega 56, the 3060 Ti is up to twice as fast — sometimes even more, in the latest games.The only real concern is the lack of VRAM.

8GB is enough, for now, but some games are starting to push beyond that threshold.Of course you can drop the texture quality a notch, and you might not even notice the difference, but deep down inside you’ll feel regret.(Not really — high settings often look indistinguishable from ultra settings.) Until AMD releases its next round of RDNA2 cards, which we expect in the first quarter of 2021, there’s nothing else that can challenge the 3060 Ti at anything close to the $399 price point.It’s 35-45 percent faster than the 2060 Super, and 25-30 percent faster than the RX 5700 XT, all for the same nominal asking price.

The biggest concern right now is just finding one of these cards for sale.Mining performance pretty much matches the 3070 (at least for the non-LHR models) and AMD’s latest gen cards, which means prices are often triple the official launch price.

Also, 8GB still feels a bit stingy, considering the 1070 had that much memory over four years ago.Read: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Review 5.GeForce RTX 3070 Excellent 1440p Performance GPU: Ampere (GA104) | GPU Cores: 5888 | Boost Clock: 1,730 MHz | Video RAM: 8GB GDDR6 14 Gbps | TDP: 220 watts The GeForce RTX 3070 continues the Ampere onslaught and the march of next-gen architectures.It’s a sizeable step down from the 3080, and has less than half the VRAM of AMD’s RX 6800 series cards.However, the 3070 also costs less than AMD’s new cards and still has generally superior ray tracing performance, plus DLSS.It’s too bad all of the 3070 cards will likely continue to sell out for quite some time.The new RTX 3070 Ti delivers slightly better performance for $100 more, but also bumps the power use up by 30%, so we recommend sticking with the non-Ti card for now.

The 3060 Ti’s $400 price point makes the 3070 less endearing.It’s about 10-12 percent faster but costs 25 percent more.

Of course, if you factor in the rest of your gaming PC, that extra $100 probably isn’t too big of a problem.For new gaming PC builds, you shouldn’t buy anything right now that costs $300 or more unless it’s sporting an Ampere or Big Navi GPU.Especially at current shortage-induced prices.We do have some reservations, however.While 1440p and 4K gaming are totally possible, 4K at maximum quality often drops below 60 fps.

DLSS can fix that, if a game supports it, but ray tracing even with DLSS often means 40-50 fps at 4K.We’re also concerned with the 8GB of GDDR6.Not only is that less memory on a narrower bus than the 3080, but it’s clocked quite a bit lower.We’ve already encountered a few games where 8GB starts to be a bit limiting at maximum quality, and that’s only going to get worse in the future.

AMD’s choice to put 16GB on its Navi 21 GPUs makes Nvidia’s 8GB look even worse, and Nvidia will have 12GB on the RTX 3060.If you want a fast Nvidia GPU for the lowest price possible, the 3060 Ti gets the nod.If you can fork over an extra $100, the 3070 is a reasonable upgrade, which then leads to another $100 for the 3070 Ti, and at that point why not just get the 3080? It’s the ‘best’ overall card, after all.That’s the problem with looking at higher cost cards, and the law of diminishing returns.For now, if you’ve always wanted an RTX 2080 Ti but couldn’t justify the cost, the price of entry has been (sort of) slashed in half.Read: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Review [6.

Radeon RX 6700 XT] Good 1440p Graphics Card, Lower Price GPU: Navi 22 | GPU Cores: 2560 | Boost Clock: 2424 MHz | Video RAM: 12GB GDDR6 16 Gbps | TDP: 230 watts Start with the Navi 21 GPU and then cut down the various functional units to create a smaller die that can sell at lower prices and you have AMD’s Navi 22 and the RX 6700 XT.It has the same number of GPU cores as the previous generation RX 5700 XT, but significantly higher clock speeds and more cache give it about a 25% boost to performance (at higher settings and resolutions, at least).

AMD’s RX 6700 XT hits the highest clock speeds we’ve ever seen on a GPU, boosting at 2.5GHz and more during gaming sessions — and that’s at stock, on the reference card.With some tuning and overclocking, we were able to hit speeds of 2.7-2.8GHz, still without cooking the GPU.That’s very impressive, though we’re a bit sad that it ‘only’ has 2560 GPU cores.In our performance testing, the RX 6700 XT trades blows with the RTX 3070 and RTX 3060 Ti.

It’s a bit faster than the latter, and a bit slower than the former, so the launch price of $479 seems okay.Except, if we include pretty much any games with DLSS or ray tracing, the 6700 XT starts looking more like a 3060 Ti competitor.The real issue is the same as with everything else.RX 6700 XT just launched, and it immediately sold out, even at radically inflated prices.

Currently, the card shows up at over $1,100 on eBay.It’s definitely not worth that, even if you want to mine Ethereum .Unfortunately, the prospects of finding a 6700 XT card at a more reasonable price are slim.Read: AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT review 7.Radeon RX 6800 Great 1440p Graphics Card, Okay Ray Tracing GPU: Navi 21 XL | GPU Cores: 3840 | Boost Clock: 2105 MHz | Video RAM: 16GB GDDR6 16 Gbps | TDP: 250 watts Take everything great about the new Navi 21 GPU that powers the 6800 XT (above), then trim it by about 10% and you get the vanilla RX 6800.

You still get the full 16GB GDDR6 and 128MB Infinity Cache, but only 96 ROPs and slightly lower clock speeds.It’s a reasonable compromise, but we think the 6800 XT is the better option all things considered (unless pricing eventually drops a bit more on the vanilla cards).The RX 6800 also puts in a good showing against Nvidia’s RTX 3070.

In our current 9-game test suite, it’s 9% faster overall.Of course it also costs 16% more, but we think having twice as much VRAM is a fair trade.

The real concerns are the same as with the 6800 XT: Ray tracing performance looks a bit soft, basically matching Nvidia’s previous generation RTX 2080 Super.The lack of a DLSS alternative is even more of a problem.

Take the RTX 3070 in DXR performance.Without DLSS, the 3070 is already 12% faster.Turn on DLSS Quality mode and the gap increases to more than 50%! Also, DLSS can be used without ray tracing, and typically looks better than temporal AA (or at least as good).

So, AMD needs to get FidelityFX Super Resolution out the door, and then it needs game developers to actually implement the feature.

It’s open source, plus AMD RDNA2 GPUs are in all of the next generation consoles, which means Super Res will probably see plenty of uptake… eventually.For now, we’d grab a 6800 more for the rasterization prowess and not worry so much about ray tracing.Not that you can find one in stock.Read: AMD Radeon RX 6800 review 8.GeForce RTX 3060 12GB An Excellent Mainstream Graphics Card GPU: Ampere (GA106) | GPU Cores: 3840 | Boost Clock: 1,777 MHz | Video RAM: 12GB GDDR6 15 Gbps | TDP: 170 watts The lowest price and performance addition to Nvidia’s desktop Ampere lineup is where the cuts to processing power might have gone too far.This is the first GA106 card, with a 192-bit memory interface and 12GB VRAM (though we suspect a 6GB model will show up eventually).But with 26% fewer GPU cores compared to the 3060 Ti, and less memory bandwidth, overall performance is only on the level of the RTX 2070.So, two and a half years later, you can now match a $500 graphics card with a $330 alternative.

Or that’s the theory.Unfortunately, demand has once again eclipsed supply in a big way, and we’re seeing RTX 3060 12GB cards selling on eBay for over $800.

That’s despite the measures Nvidia took to cut Ethereum mining performance in half, which ended up being meaningless when Nvidia hacked its own drivers (on accident).Word is miners had already found other workaround, and the pricing certainly suggests that’s the case.VRAM capacity at least isn’t a problem, and there are a few instances where the 3060 12GB starts to close the gap with the 3060 Ti.It never quite gets there, however, and the 3060 Ti remains the better choice if you can find one at a reasonable price.AMD’s Radeon RX 6700 XT has the same amount of VRAM, but with the large 96MB Infinity Cache it ends up performance quite a bit better — and costing quite a bit more.Maybe an RX 6700 will show up next month to provide some needed competition in the sub-$400 range, though of course those will also sell out.

If you discount ray tracing and DLSS, the RTX 3060 ends up being roughly the same performance as AMD’s RX 5700 XT, 18 months later.Not exactly something to set the world on fire, but then that’s typical of mainstream parts.We can only hope supply and pricing return to nominal levels sooner rather than later.Read: Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 12GB Review 9.

Radeon RX 6900 XT AMD’s Fastest GPU, Severely Expensive GPU: Navi 21 XTX | GPU Cores: 5120 | Boost Clock: 2250 MHz | Video RAM: 16GB GDDR6 16 Gbps | TDP: 300 watts This is the other end of the Navi 21 spectrum.Where the 6800 cuts performance and price a bit, the RX 6900 XT boosts performance a bit and increases the (theoretical) price by over 50%.It’s a big jump for small gains, and you don’t even get something like more VRAM (the one saving grace of the RTX 3090).Also, good luck finding one for less than $1,500 right now.

AMD pulled out all the stops on the RX 6900 XT.It has a fully enabled Navi 21 GPU, which helps account for its scarcity.It’s still a big chip as well, which means AMD is better off making more Zen 3 CPUs or console processors than trying to crank out Big Navi.Even as a mining solution, it’s pretty mediocre, as the RX 6800 matches it on Ethereum hashing performance.The same red flags are still present as well, like the mediocre ray tracing performance and lack of a working DLSS alternative.

Also of note is that AMD’s Big Navi cards have rendering errors on several of the RT enabled games we’ve checked — they work, but the RT reflections and other effects are often limited.So, if you want the best RT experience right now, Nvidia still wins (not that you need RT to enjoy games).Those who just want the fastest AMD GPU will still be happy with the 6900 XT.

Unless by ‘fastest’ you’re referring to mining performance, in which case the old Radeon VII still comes out over 30% faster.(Yeah, it’s also selling at extreme prices these days.) Read: AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT review 10.

GTX 1660 Super Best Mainstream Esports/1080p High Graphics Card GPU: Turing (TU116) | GPU Cores: 1408 | Boost Clock: 1,785 MHz | Video RAM: 6GB GDDR6 14 Gbps | TDP: 125 watts Dipping down closer to $200 (sort of), the main choice comes down to the GeForce GTX 1660 Super , the vanilla GeForce GTX 1660 , or the RX 5500 XT 8GB .They’re all viable candidates, but we’ve done the testing (see below) and the GTX 1660 Super is 15% faster than the regular 1660, and nearly 20% faster than the RX 5500 XT 8GB.Basically, we strongly encourage you to spend the extra money for the performance upgrade.Or we would, if you could find a 1660 Super for close to $230.Paying $450 for a GTX 1660 Super is not a good deal.We’ve looked at the GTX 1660 vs.

RX 5500 XT and declared the Nvidia card the winner, but we also think the GTX 1660 Super is better than the GTX 1660.We used to think the RTX 2060 or RX 5600 XT were even better, though increasing prices on those cards make them less attractive these days.We may see a few deals on the 5600 XT, RTX 2060, or GTX 1660 Super, though, which almost certainly isn’t going to happen on the latest and greatest next-gen Ampere and RDNA2 GPUs.Despite using TSMC 12nm FinFET, actual power use is basically identical to AMD’s Navi 14 chips made using TSMC 7nm FinFET.The fact that Nvidia is faster and draws the same power while using the older manufacturing node says a lot.For $230, the GTX 1660 Super basically gets you the same level of performance as the older GTX 1070 in a more efficient design.

It also comes with the enhanced Turing NVENC that makes it a great choice for streaming video.The main drawback to the GTX 1660 Super is that we may see Ampere and Navi 2x cards push down into the $250 range the coming months.Or at least try to, depending on how the shortages continue.

Either way, that’s likely substantially more performance and features for the same money.GTX 1660 Super runs about as fast as a GTX 1070 while using less power, and handles 1080p quite well, but the current market conditions make buying any card questionable.Read: Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super Review [11.

GTX 1650 Super] Best Budget Gaming Card That’s Not Ancient Tech GPU: TU116 | GPU Cores: 1280 | Boost Clock: 1,725 MHz | Video RAM: 4GB GDDR6 12 Gbps | TDP: 100 watts The budget realm of GPUs often ends up going to older hardware, and now that Ampere and RDNA2 have arrived, we’re one gen behind the latest and greatest.At least the GTX 1650 Super has now displaced the RX 570 4GB , which was selling for $120-$130 for what seemed like ages.The 1650 Super delivers about 30% higher performance while using substantially less power.It also costs more than the 570, or at least what the 570 used to cost — it seems supplies have finally dried up for the old AMD card.

( Pour one out for P6olaris .) Unfortunately, if price is your driving concern, not even the budget GPUs are immune to the current shortages.We used to see pricing of $150-$160 for the 1650 Super, but now it’s difficult to find a card for less than $300.We’ve also seen other GPUs (like the RX 5500 XT 8GB) shoot up in price, to the point where they start to encroach on the (also overpriced) GTX 1660 Super.We do appreciate Nvidia including the latest NVENC hardware on the 1650 Super.That means if you want a budget streaming capable PC, this will suffice, especially for lighter fare like CSGO or LoL.It can also help with video conferencing apps, which are becoming increasingly popular in our COVID-pandemic world.Just note that unlike the previous gen GTX 1050 cards, you’ll need a 6-pin power connector on the 1650 Super.Read: Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Super review [12.

RX 5500 XT 4GB] Best AMD ‘Budget’ Gaming Card GPU: Navi 14 | GPU Cores: 1408 | Boost Clock: 1,845 MHz | Video RAM: 4GB GDDR6 14 Gbps | TDP: 100 watts It’s a bit of a wash between the GTX 1650 Super and the RX 5500 XT 4GB.They’re basically equal in performance and power, and prices are just as messed up here as anywhere else.You can certainly make the argument for picking up an older used GPU like a GTX 970 for less money, but then you’re getting a really old GPU and who knows what it’s been put through? The RX 5500 XT offers a decent amount of performance and can handle any game at 1080p and medium to high quality, though not necessarily at 60 fps.This really should be a $150 graphics card, so if you can find any way to hold off upgrading for the time being, we recommend waiting for prices to come back down.If you can’t wait, the 5500 XT averaged nearly 90 fps in our testing at 1080p medium, giving you room to experiment if you want to improve visual fidelity.

We’ll probably see RTX 3050 and RX 6500 cards in the coming months, which could push down into the sub-$200 range for the latest generation hardware.Whether you’ll be able to actually buy one is a different matter.Read: AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT 4GB review How We Test Graphics Cards Determining pure graphics card performance is best done by eliminating all other bottlenecks — as much as possible, at least.Our current graphics card testbed consists of a Core i9-9900K CPU, MSI MEG Z390 Ace motherboard, 32GB Corsair DDR4-3600 CL16 memory, and an XPG SX8200 Pro 2TB SSD.We test across the three most common gaming resolutions, 1080p, 1440p, and 4K, at medium and ultra settings.

Where possible, we use ‘reference’ cards for all of these tests, like Nvidia’s Founders Edition models.Most mid-range and lower GPUs do not have reference models, however, and in some cases we only have factory overclocked cards for testing.

We do our best to select cards that are close to the reference specs in such cases.Our current test suite of games consists of nine titles.The data in the following charts is from testing conducted during the past several months.Note that a few games (Red Dead Redemption 2 and The Division 2) may not run on all GPUs at all setting, and we have interpolated data for the overall score to keep the charts consistent.

You need at least a 4GB card for 1080p ultra in RDR2, and 6GB or more for 4K ultra.(Omitting the results for RDR2 skews the average performance chart slightly, which is why we interpolated results.) The following charts contain the most common GPUs of the past three years.We have included everything from the RTX 3090 down to the GTX 1650, and RX 6800 down through RX 5500 XT, and nearly everything in between.

We’ve had to cut earlier GPUs and the Titan cards from the charts to keep things manageable.(We have all the test data, though, which is how the scores and sorting are generated for the table at the top, which comes from our GPU Benchmarks Hierarchy).The charts are color coded with AMD in red/grey and Nvidia in blue/black to make it easier to see what’s going on.Also note that each card takes a solid day of testing, so some of the results are now outdated — meaning they were gathered on previous drivers, running previous versions of the game, on possibly even an earlier version of Windows 10.We intend to do a full retest of all the current-gen and previous-gen GPUs in the near future, with a single set of drivers.

Any anomalies in the charts should hopefully clear up then (e.g., Red Dead Redemption 2 for example has several instances where the 6800 outperformed the faster 6800 XT and even 6900 XT).The following charts were all updated as of June 11, 2021.

1080p Medium 1080p Ultra 1440p Medium 1440p Ultra 4K Medium 4K Ultra Besides performance, we also test graphics card power consumption .We recently retested all current GPUs using Powenetics equipment and software , and found that Nvidia generally maintains an efficiency lead.

Here are the main power charts from our testing, along with clock speeds, temperatures, and fan speeds.(Note: 3080 Ti is currently missing as we had a hardware failure with our power testing equipment.) All GPUs Ranked Our full GPU Benchmarks hierarchy ranks all current in previous generation GPUs by performance, using aggregate data from the gaming test suite.Below is the abbreviated hierarchy with all the cards you can still buy (plus a few extras) ranked in order of performance, from best to worst.The score represents aggregate performance, scaled relative to the RTX 3090.

|Score||GPU||Base/Boost||Memory||Power||Buy| |100.0%||GA102||1400/1695 MHz||24GB GDDR6X||350W| |97.9%||GA102||1370/1665 MHz||12GB GDDR6X||350W| |97.0%||Navi 21||1825/2250 MHz||16GB GDDR6||300W| |93.5%||Navi 21||1825/2250 MHz||16GB GDDR6||300W| |93.2%||GA102||1440/1710 MHz||10GB GDDR6X||320W| |85.7%||Navi 21||1700/2105 MHz||16GB GDDR6||250W||AMD Radeon RX 6800| |81.5%||GA104||1770/1575 MHz||8GB GDDR6X||290W| |79.5%||TU102||1350/1770 MHz||24GB GDDR6||280W| |77.4%||TU102||1350/1635 MHz||11GB GDDR6||260W| |76.3%||GA104||1500/1730 MHz||8GB GDDR6||220W| |73.3%||Navi 22||2321/2424 MHz||12GB GDDR6||230W| |69.6%||GA104||1410/1665 MHz||8GB GDDR6||200W| |66.8%||TU104||1650/1815 MHz||8GB GDDR6||250W| |62.5%||TU104||1515/1800 MHz||8GB GDDR6||225W| |59.6%||TU104||1605/1770 MHz||8GB GDDR6||215W| |58.9%||Vega 20||1400/1750 MHz||16GB HBM2||300W| |57.8%||GP102||1480/1582 MHz||11GB GDDR5X||250W| |57.0%||Navi 10||1605/1905 MHz||8GB GDDR6||225W| |54.7%||GA106||1320/1777 MHz||12GB GDDR6||170W| |53.1%||TU106||1410/1710 MHz||8GB GDDR6||185W| |51.4%||Navi 10||1465/1725 MHz||8GB GDDR6||185W| |50.6%||TU106||1470/1650 MHz||8GB GDDR6||175W| |48.4%||Vega 10||1274/1546 MHz||8GB HBM2||295W| |46.6%||Navi 10||?/1615 MHz||6GB GDDR6||150W| |45.2%||GP104||1607/1733 MHz||8GB GDDR5X||180W| |44.9%||TU106||1365/1680 MHz||6GB GDDR6||160W| |42.7%||Vega 10||1156/1471 MHz||8GB HBM2||210W| |41.8%||GP104||1607/1683 MHz||8GB GDDR5||180W| |37.9%||TU116||1530/1785 MHz||6GB GDDR6||125W||GeForce GTX 1660 Super| |37.8%||TU116||1365/1680 MHz||6GB GDDR6||120W| |36.7%||GP104||1506/1683 MHz||8GB GDDR5||150W| |32.8%||TU116||1530/1785 MHz||6GB GDDR5||120W| |32.4%||Polaris 30||1469/1545 MHz||8GB GDDR5||225W| |31.8%||Navi 14||?/1717 MHz||8GB GDDR6||130W||AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT 8GB| |30.9%||Polaris 20||1257/1340 MHz||8GB GDDR5||185W| |28.5%||TU116||1530/1725 MHz||4GB GDDR6||100W||Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Super| |28.4%||Navi 14||?/1717 MHz||4GB GDDR6||130W||AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT 4GB| |26.5%||GP106||1506/1708 MHz||6GB GDDR5||120W| |25.2%||Polaris 20||1168/1244 MHz||4GB GDDR5||150W| |23.8%||TU117||1410/1590 MHz||4GB GDDR6||75W||GeForce GTX 1650 GDDR6| |22.3%||GP106||1506/1708 MHz||3GB GDDR5||120W| |20.9%||TU117||1485/1665 MHz||4GB GDDR5||75W||GeForce GTX 1650 Gaming OC 4G| |16.1%||GP107||1290/1392 MHz||4GB GDDR5||75W| |12.5%||Polaris 21||1175/1275 MHz||4GB GDDR5||80W| |12.2%||GP107||1354/1455 MHz||2GB GDDR5||75W| [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti] [AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT] [AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT] [AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080] [AMD Radeon RX 6800] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Ti] [Nvidia Titan RTX] [Nvidia Titan RTX] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 Ti] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 Ti] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070] [AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 Super] [GeForce RTX 2080 Super] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080] [GeForce RTX 2080] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070 Super] [GeForce RTX 2070 Super] [AMD Radeon VII] [Radeon VII] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 Ti] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 Ti] [AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT] [AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 12GB] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070] [RTX 2070] [AMD Radeon RX 5700] [AMD Radeon RX 5700] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 Super] [GeForce RTX 2060 Super] [AMD Radeon RX Vega 64] [Gigabyte Radeon RX Vega 64] [AMD Radeon RX 5600 XT] [Radeon RX 5600 XT] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060] [Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 FE] [AMD Radeon RX Vega 56] [Radeon RX Vega 56] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 Ti] [GeForce GTX 1070 Ti] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Ti] [GeForce GTX 1660 Ti 6GB] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070] [MSI GTX 1070] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660] [Geforce GTX 1660] [AMD Radeon RX 590] [Radeon RX 590] [AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT 8GB] [AMD Radeon RX 580 8GB] [AMD Radeon RX 580] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650 Super] [AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT 4GB] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 6GB] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 6GB] [AMD Radeon RX 570 4GB] [Radeon RX 570] [Nvidia GTX 1650 GDDR6] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 3GB] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 3GB] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 Ti] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 Ti] [AMD Radeon RX 560 4GB] [PowerColor Red Dragon Radeon RX 560] [Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050] [Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1050] Finding Discounts on the Best Graphics Cards With all the GPU shortages these days, you’re unlikely to see huge sales on a graphics card, but you may find some savings by checking out the latest Newegg promo codes , Best Buy promo codes and Micro Center coupon codes .

Want to comment on our best graphics picks for gaming? Let us know what you think in the Tom’s Hardware Forums .MORE: HDMI vs.DisplayPort: Which Is Better For Gaming? MORE: Best CPUs for Gaming .

Leave a Reply

Next Post

ETC coin price prediction 2021-2028: a sustainable rally?

Trade Ethereum Classic to US Dollar – ETC/USD CFD The price of ethereum classic (ETC) rose rapidly on 6 May, soaring to an all-time high of $176 from the $70 level on 5 May.On the same day, ether (ETH) also set a record, reaching $3,500 a coin.However, while ETH proceeded to hit new highs, eventually…
ETC coin price prediction 2021-2028: a sustainable rally?

Subscribe US Now