SmokeRngs
Sort-of-Regular
- Joined
- May 31, 2019
- Messages
- 215
- Points
- 43
I agree with you 100% and have looked at hardware this way for a very long time. As much as I'd probably enjoy reading an editorial regarding this very subject I sadly think few people will be affected by it (but you should definitely do it.) Despite what you tend to read on forums, most people are looking for bang for the buck. Most people aren't buying $1000+ cards. Hell, most people aren't buying $500+ cards. And most people preaching of nVidia 4090 performance won't ever seen one of those cards in their lives much less own one. I think it boils down to intentional ignorance. Whether this is because someone doesn't want to learn something or simply fanboy enthusiasm is irrelevant.Another thing I will add, so many reviewers are only focusing on the result, the number, "bigger bar is better" value, instead of the actual gameplay experience that the card delivers. Instead of just looking squarely at which card is 10% one or the other below or above the other, why not actually look at the performance the card is delivering, and determine if that is a playable enough experience for you? For example, the 4090 may give 120fps in one game, and the 7900 XTX gives you 100fps, well that is a 20% difference, and one could say the 4090 is the better buy, BUT LOOK AT THE ACTUAL FRAMERATE MY GOSH, 100FPS is playable too!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! In this example, the 7900 XTX delivers a playable gameplay experience, plenty of performance in the game, and smooth gameplay. If it's $600 less, well that would be a much better value, and all you need to enjoy the game, right?
Perhaps I need to make a video editorial, to get these points across. Not enough people are hearing this.
I also agree that relatively speaking the 7900XTX is a great value.
Beyond that, I'm with others who say ray tracing is still moot. When it requires a halo card to have a chance of running it decently it's not a feature worth worrying about. Come talk to me about ray tracing when the lower mid range cards can run it without catastrophic performance reductions. When ray tracing was introduced on the 2x00 nVidia line I figured it would be three generations before it could be usable. I was dead wrong about that. From the look of things is going to be at least six generations before that happens. Until then raster is king no matter what anyone says and game makers seem to be of the same mindset considering how few games make any use of ray tracing at all.
Another thing to keep in mind is that this is AMD's first attempt at a chiplet style GPU. AMD obviously applied a lot of what they learned with Zen chiplets to RDNA 3 but it would be a complete surprise if there isn't more performance to be had as time goes on through drivers and/or game optimizations. There were performance improvements over time with Zen via hardware revisions and software. The Windows scheduler until updated for various Zen revisions definitely had issues.