Video Cards

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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I'm really just waiting on news of a B770-equivalent. Or an affordable RTX 5070Ti, although recent history tells me that's absolutely not going to happen. The latest thing out of the rumor mill is that AMD is going to make a 9080XTX or something simply because there's now a proven market and clear goodwill for it.

My personal interest in graphics hardware stops about the time new cards hit $700 and honestly I'd rather have a two slot $300 card that doesn't need more power than my CPU to operate and scrape the right-hand side of my full ATX desktop chassis as I put one in.
 

Handruin

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I did end up getting an rtx 5080FE on Friday. A buddy of mine works at Nvidia and was able to snag one and at a mild discount ($900) which is small bonus. It's working nicely in my older rig but I probably won't get all it's performance until I finally upgrade everything else.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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It appears that there are no plans to release any higher end Battlemage GPUs. Intel didn't bring it up at all during its Tech Conference earlier in the week and I'm assuming that's not good news. A faster GPU die DOES exist and there's speculation it might be used for workstation hardware but it's not going anything mere mortals will be able to buy. Maybe a $500 16GB RTX 5060 won't be so bad.
 

ddrueding

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It is much easier for leadership to say GPUs are the problem than to admit they are having fundamental failures in their fabrication processes.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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It is much easier for leadership to say GPUs are the problem than to admit they are having fundamental failures in their fabrication processes.

I think Intel has already admitted that fabrication is a huge issue. They're pretty open that they're second rate, much like AMD did when they spun off Global Foundries. Not everyone needs 3nm TSMC wafers and not everybody can even compete to buy them. Intel has moved its fabs to a separate business unit that I think will get sold off sooner or later.

I figured Intel would be exiting the DGPU market again after how badly Alchemist performed. They have to do some belt tightening anyway.

Alchemist wasn't great for gamers, but it was actually a win for OEMs and Integrators who were able to sell systems on the basis of having a dGPU at all for anything like a reasonable price when, if you're remember, five year old GTX 1060s were getting sold for $300.

The A7x0 cards are definitely a lot better now than they were at launch and Intel updates its drivers for Windows about twice a month. They are still taking the process seriously. Remember that they're going to be building these graphics cores regardless, because the underlying tech is important as a commitment to AI. Once the cores exist, scaling them to discrete hardware isn't that difficult.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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They're 8GB and don't trace any rays, but RX 5700XTs are unicorn hardware right now because they can be found secondhand for under $100 and are fantastic for 1080p gaming. I bought a couple so I never have to spend $250 on a 3050 again and honestly they're kind of perfectly positioned to tide someone over for the fateful day when we can go back to buying something that isn't stupid for under $500.
These guys clock in around 15% slower than an RTX 3060, but they're also $200 cheaper right now even for used cards.
 

sedrosken

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What's the plan for when AMD inevitably drops driver support for them at the worst possible time? I know Polaris has to be next on the chopping block, but they dropped support for the R9 2/3xx range during the last GPU shortage. I'm honestly shocked they still support Polaris, even, and that nVidia still supports Pascal in turn.
 

ddrueding

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I've been helping a friend on a budget look for a 1440 gaming card to pair with a 9600X CPU his current thoughts are 9070>5070>B580, though I suspect that the Intel card will be most likely to be available near MSRP.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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What's the plan for when AMD inevitably drops driver support for them at the worst possible time? I know Polaris has to be next on the chopping block, but they dropped support for the R9 2/3xx range during the last GPU shortage. I'm honestly shocked they still support Polaris, even, and that nVidia still supports Pascal in turn.

I've been able to find volunteer led efforts to get drivers for "unsupported" GPUs years after official support ended. This is most often an annoyance for old notebooks where support vanishes at the drop of a hat about 40 seconds after the last system using that hardware goes out of warranty, but it's not usually a huge issue to dig them up. I was able to find working drivers for a GTX 980 for a ~2012 Mac Pro last year, although that was more of a "because we can" than anything anyone needed to do.

Beyond that, if somebody is really dead set on gaming and newer cheap hardware truly isn't an option, they can install Bazzite or Mint or whatever and Steam to their heart's content. The GTX 1080 (Ti) is another good option but they're a lot harder to get, need more power and usually cost more like $150 - $175 than sub-$100.


The A770 is technically still faster and they're actually easier to find. My local Microcenter had a few out on the shelves last time I was there. I've never seen a B580 and I've been trying to get one since December of last year. I also saw a 12GB RTX 5070. One, at least. I'm not paying $700 for a 12GB card though.

Yes, Intel Arc cards are spectacularly unpopular, but the "nVidia at all costs" attitude is keeping a lot of people from being able to, you know, actually play games on their computers.
 
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