GPUs Graphics Reviews

Sapphire Radeon RX 5700 XT Pulse Review – Navi with certain vibrations

Sapphire's first Navi card is with the Pulse actually the entry model, if one follows the previous nomenclature of the manufacturer. This also entails compromises and today we will sound out which and what this means for the customer.

I deliberately chose all three common screen resolutions for all benchmarks and rather adapted the settings to the usability. So this is not more about “living better”, but about “playing faster”. I am sure that the benefit is rather given and I never understood why one would like to see Full HD as resolution only with the absolute beginner cards. Otherwise all graphics are self-explanatory anyway and I spare myself the novels of the verbal paraphrase of what you can already see with your eyes.

Since we don’t want or have to test CPUs, I deliberately chose the highest settings for these benchmarks, as all cards deliver very usable frame rates. But the advantage of the board partner card over the reference card is really marginal, because it’s barely more than three to five percent. If one uses the silent BIOS, the gap to the reference card is usually only about one to two percent.

 

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About the author

Igor Wallossek

Editor-in-chief and name-giver of igor'sLAB as the content successor of Tom's Hardware Germany, whose license was returned in June 2019 in order to better meet the qualitative demands of web content and challenges of new media such as YouTube with its own channel.

Computer nerd since 1983, audio freak since 1979 and pretty much open to anything with a plug or battery for over 50 years.

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