![]() As are the number of teraflops (or GFLOPS) it has since that indicates the theoretical performance of that graphics card. You need to take a look at the vital specs: GPU memory, GPU size, Thermal Design Power or TDP, and ports and power connectors are all important. You're better putting it off for a bit and saving up until you can afford the GPU that's the right fit. You shouldn't settle for what you can afford right now if it's not powerful enough to handle your 1440p needs. You need to consider your graphical demands. John Loeffler, Components Editor How to choose the best graphics card for you How to choose the best graphics card for you It might be somewhat hard to find now that Intel has discontinued the Limited Edition first-party cards as the company's graphics group pivots to its next-gen Battlemage GPUs, but there are still plenty of Arc A770s online, especially from third-party partners like ASRock and Acer. While this card is more marketed toward 1080p gamers (where it also excels), you're going to get more than enough 1440p performance from the A770 under typical conditions, and for the price, it's hard to beat. And, with 16GB VRAM at your disposal, 4K gaming with settings tweaks isn't out of the question, especially with more modest titles where the graphical demands on the shader cores aren't as high (I'm looking at you Cyberpunk 2077). In terms of pure rasterization, the A770 averaged 61 frames per second at 1440p across the games I tested, which definitely makes the card easy to recommend. Intel XeSS isn't as good as Nvidia DLSS, but it's surprisingly powerful, and on games that support it, you're going to like what you see, including a roughly 38% better framerate when using ray tracing at 1440p. The biggest draw for this card honestly is going to be its price and its strong upscaling technology, Intel XeSS, which uses hardware AI cores to process frames faster than the software solution AMD uses. I'm wrapping up my Intel Arc A770 review as we speak, so it'll be a little while longer before I can formally pronounce a verdict on the A770, but there's no denying that the card has decent 1440p chops, even if it's not the best there is on the market. John Loeffler, Components Editor The best Nvidia Ampere 1440p card We'll have more when we formally review the card in the next few weeks, but given everything I've seen, you definitely don't want to sleep on this card, especially now that it's price has dropped considerably now that AMD RDNA 3 and Nvidia Lovelace cards are on the market. The RTX 3070, meanwhile, pumps out 68 fps with DLSS set to performance and RT turned on.Īnd while the Nvidia RTX 4060 Ti has much better ray tracing and upscaling performance, the RX 6750 XT manages to beat Nvidia's midrange GPU pretty handily in pure raster gaming performance, 82 fps to 73 fps, on average. AMD FSR helps close the gap with an average of 52 fps with RT turned on and FSR set to performance. ![]() This puts it even ahead of the Nvidia RTX 3070! Of course, once you turn on ray tracing, that all changes, with the RX 6750 XT averaging about 32 fps at 1440p with max settings, compared to the RTX 3070's 47 fps average over the same test suite. If you don't factor in ray tracing or upscaling tech, the RX 6750 XT is able to easily clear 80 fps on maximum settings at 1440p, on average. But for pure rasterization performance at 1440p, the RX 6750 XT is one hell of a contender. It has its limitations, to be fair, and mostly that comes in the form of lagging ray-tracing performance, something that plagued the entire RDNA 2 generation. But with all the latest-gen cards dropping over the past few months, I've actually put more time in with the RX 6750 XT than I would have if I'd just reviewed it, and I have to say, the performance on this card is pretty spectacular. Believe it or not, I'm still working on our full AMD Radeon RX 6750 XT review (I'm going for the full last-gen completion acheivement!). ![]()
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