
The Radeon RX 6000 series and upcoming RDNA 3 GPUs will not use this power connector. As a result, it will only have ten memory chips of the same capacity and speeds for a total of 20 GB of GDDR6 VRAM and 800 GB/s bandwidth. Meanwhile, the Radeon RX 7900 XT should make use of a cut-down Navi 31 GPU with 10,752 stream processors and a 320-bit wide memory bus. It will come with twelve 16 Gbit GDDR6 memory chips running at 20 Gbps for a total of 24 GB of VRAM with a bandwidth of 960 GB/s. The flagship Radeon RX 7900 XTX will reportedly use a full-fat version of the Navi 31 GPU with 12,288 stream processors and a 384-bit memory bus width. The latter should allow for up to 96 MB of Infinite cache in a standard configuration (or more if the company decides to use its 3D stacking technology). Both will utilize AMD's flagship Navi 31 GPU, which might feature a Multi-Chip-Module design with one graphics compute die and six memory dies. The company claims that the new GPUs will offer over 50 percent higher performance per watt compared to its current lineup thanks to a 5nm process node and chiplet design.Īccording to the latest rumors, Team Red will announce two high-end models next week, the Radeon RX 7900 XTX and RX 7900 XT. We were impressed by its slightly less capable sibling, the AMD Radeon RX 6600.Highly anticipated: AMD will unveil its new Radeon RX 7000 series graphics cards based on the new RDNA 3 architecture next week. The price is extremely attractive, and there are several smaller designs from hardware partners, which means the RX 6600 XT is also a good shout for those building a smaller gaming PC. This means you won't require too much in the form of additional cooling, and the RX 6600 XT shouldn't get too hot.ġ080p really is the limit for this card, though, in some games, you will be able to step up to 1440p.

But that's not all, AMD managed to keep the power draw down considerably, rating the card at just 160W for TDP.

We've got HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 1.4, a core clock speed of 2,359MHz, and a full 6GB of GDDR6 VRAM. This is a fantastic GPU at the lower end of the catalog from AMD with support for ray tracing - though whether you should enable it is an entirely different story.

If all you require is a budget-friendly GPU that's both great for 1080p gaming and can easily fit inside smaller PC builds, look no further than the AMD Radeon RX 6600 XT.
