Now you have reached 100 FPS on average despite RAM stabilization. That’s just over 12 percent more and thus the maximum for this game. More is not possible with the Radeon RX 5600 XT, because AMD intervenes extremely restrictively in the driver to rigorously prevent further performance increases. This is a great pity, but from the manufacturer’s point of view it is understandable to some extent. For the end customer the card becomes even less attractive, because it is very counterproductive to the current popular sport of overclocking. So you will have to live with the card as it is.
And for all those who believe that AMD has given a generous gift to the customers with this BIOS upgrade: I have made all changes here with the old BIOS, because one could have overclocked this card to exactly the same level without much effort. AMD only takes this step with the new BIOSes away from the customer by using the full overclocking range already ex factory. A genuine extra looks unfortunately different. And since the driver including the certain limits was already distributed before the updates, nobody can claim that these changes are based on a last minute “reflection”. All this was certainly internally fixed for quite some time.
- 1 - All new limits and the old BIOS
- 2 - FPS with old BIOS
- 3 - MorePowerTool: Select the Graphics Device
- 4 - MorePowerTool: Load Data (BIOS)
- 5 - MorePowerTool: File Selection
- 6 - MorePowerTool: Maximum GPU Clock Rate
- 7 - MorePowerTool: Maximum TGB and TDC
- 8 - MorePowerTool: New GPU Clock Rate
- 9 - MorePowerTool: Write the SoftPowerPlayTable (SPPT)
- 10 - MorePowerTool: Confirm and Exit
- 11 - Check all Changes width GPU-Z
- 12 - FPS with New BIOS
- 13 - MorePowerTool: Decrease the Memory Clock Rate for more Stability
- 14 - MorePowerTool: Write SPPT and Confirm
- 15 - FPS with stable Memory Clocks
- 16 - A little bit more OC with the Afterburner
- 17 - FPS with all Tweaks and Conclusion
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