AMD also has some innovations to offer here. In addition to the already known metrics data on the GPU, more data on the CPU is now available. Unfortunately, this did not work for me in the case quite as it is advertised on the part of AMD. On the one hand, the metrics data regarding the Ryzen 7 2700X is not displayed in its entirety and on the other hand, the FPS display did not work or only worked partially in various games. Here is the picture from the reviewer briefing from AMD.
In comparison, here’s my take!
In this case not all options concerning the CPU were available to me. But that’s not a big deal, since AMD will surely solve the problem with an update. So you can not only look at the metrics data, but also record it and evaluate it later. Interesting for the topic Frametimes? I’ll have to take a look and see how usable this is!
AMD can also surely fix the FPS issue, such as in FarCry 5, Overwatch and The Division 2! For those who care, The Division 2 runs on hardware at 1080p with Ultra settings (shade low) at 130 FPS on average.
Some of you will be familiar with this image. If you want to overclock your AMD GPU, you can do it directly with the AMD software. Since recently, you can also run a stress test here to check the stability of the overclocking.
Furthermore, you can also use the auto-tuning option to overclock the GPU or VRAM. But if you want to keep the power bill low, you can also lower the power of the GPU. Probably the well-known undervolting! Ok, here comes my current favorite topic: latencies!
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