- An alleged benchmark emerged for RX 9070 XT of AMD
- This suggests that the Entrant DNA 4 GPU could correspond to the RTX 4080
- This is another in a leak line indicating that this is the case
Another index has been deleted according to which the Radeon RX 9070 XT graphics card will be more powerful than the rumors previously indicated, and that it could be equal to RTX 4080.
WCCFTECH reports that a gigabyte (OC) RX 9070 XT has been highlighted in a reference by a user on the Anandtech forums (GAAV87). It was a score in FUROLE of 20,732 points (345 images per second) in the OpenGL graphic constraint test with a 1080p resolution.
Now take this with more than the usual skepticism reserved for such presumed leaks, but if it is correct, this score would mean that, as mentioned, the 9070 XT could offer a level of performance similar to RTX 4080 (in fact, it will become the Nvidia GPU A Smidge).
However, additional care is necessary here because the reference has been executed on Linux, and these comparisons are made with the RTX 4080 on Windows, so it’s not a matter of apple apples.
That said, there is another recent leak from the 9070 XT graceful of Furmark which has shown that the GPU reaching roughly the same type of performance (equivalent to the RX 7900 XTX, in the RTX 4080 Ballpark, in other words). In this case, the graphics card was not appointed, but it was quite easy to reconstruct the indices of what it was.
In addition to that, another piece of spill – this allegedly direct moment of DMLA – also suggests that the 9070 XT will intervene at this same level, which allows it to be competitive against the RTX 5070 Ti, in theory.
This fresh leak also provides additional information, concerning thermal, the 9070 XT behaving very well since Furmark is a stress test, which means that it challenges the GPU with a very demanding workload that pushes the hard chip.
The 9070 XT apparently contains its heat levels at 55 degrees Celsius during this difficult training session, which is laudable.
Analysis: Air strong, although with notes of “hopium” on the price front
The result is that the RX 9070 XT is very promising here, both in terms of raw performance and its ability to stay in pressure. It should be noted that the Oc graphics card presented in this last leak is a level of level of gigabyte level, so it is not its best cooling solution in action (although it is not an input level either, that is to say).
These are exciting revelations, although coming with warnings, and the fact that Furmark is certainly not 3DMARK (and in addition, the synthetic references go only so far in the estimation of the performance of a GPU). However, it is a more revealing metric than geekbench graphic tests, and speaking of these, it easily dissipates the notions recently presented via Geekbench that DNA 4 will not be so much to cry, in terms of image frequency.
Finally, it is worth keeping in mind that last month, a rumor was disseminated by the law of Youtuber Moore was dead according to which during the development, AMD was aimed at the RX 9070 XT to be just a touch faster than the RTX 4080 edition of Nvidia – which is the assertion that we see in all these leaks.
It seems to me that there is more than a grain of truth here, with all these rumors aligning, but as always, let us not prevent speculation, even if everything seems to be in line in a reasonably convincing way.
In addition, as I continue to strike, whatever the level of performance of the 9070 models, the AMD prices of these new GPUs will be essential – and we will see the full image tomorrow, with prices that will be revealed during the AMD press event for DNA 4.
I can’t wait, and I keep the hope that the red team will do the right thing, and not only to deliver a minor price drop compared to the prices and the overall value of Nvidia, but a major blow (a uppercut, so to speak, from the Office GPU oppressed).
However, I must admit that rumors emerge that suggest that AMD could push the disappointing PDFs to make profits rather than taking Nvidia in the mid -range. I hope they are bad, and yes, there is a lot of hope, I fully admit it.