Is there such a card?

I’ve owned my XFX RX 6600 for about 2 years now and it’s a great card but making the step to 1440p has limits. In my opinion PC gaming is in an almost ridiculous place ATM with prices and marketing so…

Also thanks for any help and please explain why you suggest a certain GPU. New or used doesn’t matter.

My current build

  • Djoot
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    5 months ago

    I’ve been eyeing the rx 7600 from Sapphire, but it struggles with 1440p as well due to low amount of vram.

    The newly announced rx 7600 xt seems to be the sweet spot for 1440p to me, since it has 12gb of vram, and slightly higher clocks, but I’ll wait till the reviews and benchmarks are out.

    Edit: a secondhand 3060 ti or 3070 could probably also be seen as the value king, but it depends on the state of your regional secondhand market

  • ekZepp
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    55 months ago

    I would say Steam Deck, but that would be me being a troll… 🤣

    • @[email protected]
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      65 months ago

      I mean unironically though, the steam deck is a fantastic value device. If anyone plays more than just the new hotness buggy AAA games, it makes for a very fun experience

    • @[email protected]
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      65 months ago

      Best value to me is usually the mid to upper mid range card of the previous generation. Seems reasonable enough and has served me well over the years.

  • @Ismay
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    35 months ago

    Had pretty much the same experience. Got a 6600XT, moved to 1440p.

    I bought a 6700XT and I’ m pretty happy with it. If I had to buy something today, would probably try to find a 7700XT

    • @[email protected]OP
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      35 months ago

      I sill really like the 6600 as it runs quiet and doesn’t draw much power for most of the games I own but it’s just the few I play regularly now where it struggles.

      I regret not getting a 6750 XT last November when the price was good.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 months ago

        If power consumption is a concern, you can manually tweak your power consumption in AMD’s driver. I like to stay under 200 watts for GPU, so I undervolted my 6800. Since most chips nowadays are pushed well past their efficiency curve, it took just a minor undervolt and a minor underclock to cut my power consumption by half. My 6800 currently pushes more frames at 1440p with lower wattage than my previous 6600 at 1080p. Although, you do have to have to have the time to sit there and try different frequency and voltage values.

        • @Ismay
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          15 months ago

          Did that too with my 6700XT. Don’t play FPS much so don’t really care about frame rate over 60 most of the time.

          Decreased voltage and changes ventilation to ensure a more silent experience, love it now ☺️

  • @[email protected]
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    25 months ago

    For me, I think the 6000 series is remarkably good. I picked up a 6800 non-XT for something like 380 dollars late last year. Personally, I think that’s my suggestion if you plan to move to 1440p (that was my reason for upgrading as well).

    IMO 8 GB VRAM isn’t enough nowadays, and I suspect 12 GB is next on the chopping block. It may be barely enough for now, but I don’t think it’ll be enough in the near future. Nobody can predict the future, but I would honestly go straight for 16 GB VRAM cards if you want your card to have any lasting power

  • @[email protected]
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    15 months ago

    I managed to snag a second hand 6800xt for basically 350$ and its a beast. 80 fps avg on cyberpunk high settings (no RT). It is power hungry though. Otherwise as people said, maybe a new 7600xt. Whatever you pick, have a lool at the 2nd hand market.

  • @[email protected]
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    15 months ago

    FPS divided by price at the settings you want it to run at. For example, you want 1080 or 1440, 60 or 120fps. Then find cards that can run that. 3rd party cards vary widely at those prices.

    You can take the cheapest one at this point, but if you do the ratio, then you can find that maybe one is just a few dollars cheaper but gives more performance