![]() It breaks 60 FPS in almost every game we threw at it, at least at 1080p, something other cards under $200 struggle to do. The RX 570 improves on the RX 480’s performance at a lower price point, and that is enough to recommend it. Anyone who want the latest feature set will have to wait for AMD’s upcoming Vega architecture, which has no release date. It produces solid 1080p gaming performance, which is enough for most users now, but that may change with time. ![]() A three-year warranty certainly sweetens the pot, if you choose Asus’ Strix card. While it would be easy to say the performance alone is enough to last you a few years, it’s worth noting here that the RX 570 is a second-generation Polaris chip, and as such, doesn’t have any new features to boast about. The AMD Radeon RX 580, which starts at $200, is also a good option, though upgrading to it from the RX 570 is not necessary to enjoy modern games at 1080p and 60 frames per second. The GTX 1060 will use less power, but we’re not sure that matters for most gaming rigs. With a bump to its clock speed, the Asus Strix RX 570 competes directly with Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 1060, although the Zotac Amp! version we tested still edged out a victory. We’ll make sure to update this review once we have a proper RX 580 review unit. At $190, our Asus Strix review unit falls very close to the RX 580’s $200 starting price point, which could hurt the RX 570’s value proposition. There’s no reason to reach for the RX 400 series cards now, unless there’s an insane deal on one. The RX 570 rivals both the AMD Radeon RX 480 and the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 in performance. It doesn’t cover damage from overclocking or maintenance by hand, so think twice before you swap out the cooler. That’s a strong warranty for a GPU, particularly a mid-range model, and it’s the standard for the Asus ROG Strix series cards. Warranty informationĪsus covers the Strix RX 570 for a full three years after purchase. The RX 570 has a strong lead there, making it the value champion. All the cards we tested, including the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060, fall very close to each other in terms of raw frame rate, which makes it tough to recommend any one of these cards over the other, except when it comes to price. It won by a few frames per second in Battlefield 1, but at over 100 average FPS, it’s unlikely anyone will notice. However, the card did behind the RX 480, although just barely. That game pushes even high-end cards to their limits, and a score of 47 FPS at 1080p and the ultra-quality preset is a very strong score for a $190 video card. The RX 570 managed to pump out at least a pleasing 60 frame per second in every test except for Deus Ex: Mankind Divided, which did not surprise us, because it’s by far the most demanding game in our test suite. The thermal design power was up to 150 Watts from 120 Watts, at least on the reference design, but board partners may raise or lower that as needed. Our Asus Strix unit had a moderate overclock that pumps the maximum boost clock up to 1,278MHz. AMD has bumped the base clock from 926MHz to 1,168MHz, and the boost clock from 1,206MHz to 1,244MHz, but left the card with the same 2,048 stream processors and 32 compute units. On paper, the RX 570 does look strikingly familiar to the RX 470. ![]() With a slim price difference between the cards, the noticeable performance boost by moving to the higher-end card was too good to pass up. AMD Radeon RX 6950 XT: a close callĪMD previous Radeon RX series GPUs blew us away with their price per performance, but the RX 470 didn’t distance itself enough from the RX 480. AMD fixes another hiccup with ray tracing supportĪMD might crush Nvidia with its laptop GPUs - but it’s silent on the desktop front ![]()
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