In Ultra-HD, the CPU limit finally tends towards zero, although the GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Non-Super was already quite suitable for Ultra-HD, but with certain compromises. The new Super version has significantly more processing units, which will certainly be noticeable.
Sum of all games
I normalized the FPS and percentiles again and formed a geometric mean (Geomean) because this is simply more accurate from a statistical point of view and is also used in the industry. And yes, something is happening:
In Ultra-HD, it is now exactly 10.5 percent ahead of the non-Super, as with the MSI card tested yesterday, and you can see that the Radeon RX 7900XT in UHD even outperforms the new Super by a solid one percentage point. If you add the measurement tolerances, the result is again a nice tie.
The Radeon RX 7900XT even has a clear lead in P1, i.e. the Min FPS. But the same applies here as for the percentile curves.
Once again impressive proof of how economically the cards can operate. However, the card now requires just under 23 watts more for around 10 percent more graphics performance. Nevertheless, the card is still significantly more efficient overall than the non-super card.
- 1 - Introduction, technical data and technology
- 2 - Test system and measuring equipment
- 3 - Teardown: PCB, components and cooler
- 4 - Teardown: Material analysis
- 5 - Gaming Performance FHD (1920 x 1080)
- 6 - Gaming-Performance WQHD (2560 x 1440)
- 7 - Gaming Performance Ultra-HD (3840 x 2160)
- 8 - Details: Power consumption and load distribution
- 9 - Load peaks, cutting and power supply recommendation
- 10 - Temperatures, clock rates and infrared analysis including pad mod
- 11 - Fan curves and noise
- 12 - Summary and conclusion
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