Is Rx 5700 XT better than RTX 2060 Super?

The summer of 2019 proved an exciting one for gamers and hardware enthusiasts, not only because it brought us some amazing new CPUs from AMD to play with, but also brand new graphics cards from AMD and Nvidia. The new Super RTX cards felt deliberately held back to steal AMD’s thunder, but whether they succeeded is another matter entirely.

Contents

So, to find out if they do, let’s take a look at the AMD RX 5700 XT vs. Nvidia RTX 2060 Super in a classic head to head.

Performance

Although AMD and Nvidia’s graphics cards have differing architectures where not every specification is directly comparable, some elements are and all help create a picture of the performance potential of both cards.

Related

  • AMD RX 7900 XTX vs. Nvidia RTX 4090: the ultimate flagship GPU battle
  • All ray tracing games on PC: AMD Radeon and Nvidia RTX ray tracing
  • Our AMD RX 7900 XTX vs. Nvidia RTX 4080 comparison has a clear winner

Radeon RX 5700 XTRTX 2060 SuperProcess node7nm12nmShader units2,560 stream processors2,176 CUDA coresTensor coresN/A272RT coresN/A34Base clock1,605MHz1,470MHzGame clock1,755MhzN/ABoost clock1,905MHz1,650MHzMemory8GB GDDR68GB GDDR6Memory speed14Gbps14GbpsBandwidth448GBps448GBpsTDP225w175w

Notable takeaways from this specifications table include the identical memory configuration and the much higher clock speed of the RX 5700 XT. It should be noted, however, the AMD has adjusted its terminology for the RX 5700 series. The “boost” clock is now the highest possible clock that can be expected during an intensive workload and may last only a fraction of a second. In reality, the 5700 XT hovers around 1,750 MHz during gaming. AMD designates this as its “game clock.”

There’s also a notable absence of RT and Tensor cores on the AMD card, which we’ll get to in the section on ray tracing and other features below.

But specifications don’t tell even half the story that real-world benchmark results do. Fortunately, we have plenty of those after an exhausting week of testing new hardware from both AMD and Nvidia. We tested both cards using an Intel Core i7-8086K processor, 16GB of RAM, and a 512GB M.2 SSD.

In the synthetic 3DMark benchmark we see that the 5700 XT is a worthy competitor for the RTX 2060 Super at the same price. It’s even competitive with the $680+ Radeon VII, although it falls well behind the $500 RTX 2070 Super.

Real-world gaming tests were more of a mixed bag, but also showed decent potential for the RX 5700 XT. It fell behind the RTX 2060 Super at all resolutions in Fortnite, but came back strong in Battlefield V and Civilization VI. While the RTX 2060 Super was competitive with the 5700 XT at 1080p, at higher resolutions, particularly 4K, the AMD card was far more capable, delivering more than 90 frames per second at the highest detail in Civilization VI, and a rock-solid 60 fps in BF5.

Cooling and efficiency

AMD Radeon RX 5700 and 5700 XT reviewDan Baker/Digital Trends

Thanks to AMD’s big die shrink to 7nm, it has finally caught up with Nvidia on the efficiency front. The RTX 2060 Super is still the more efficient of the two, with a 50w lower TDP, but neither card is egregious in their demands — as we have seen with some previous generations of AMD cards, like the Vega 64 and Radeon VII.

Despite the lower-than-usual power draw though, the stock version of the 5700 XT is still not a cool card. AMD’s use of its classic blower design is disappointing and leaves the card hot and noisy once it’s been running a game or benchmark for a while. Although blower coolers do have an advantage in systems with poor case airflow, we find it hard to believe that anyone spending $400+ on a graphics card won’t have at least a few case fans keeping the rest of their system cool.

The RTX 2060 Super, on the other hand, uses Nvidia’s dual-fan Founders Edition cooling system which isn’t fantastic, but it’s a massive improvement over AMD’s solution.

Fortunately, since the debut of the 5700XT, several third-party alternatives have been released, giving buyers vastly improved cooling for only a few dollars more. Cards like the PowerColor Red Devil, or the Sapphire Pulse, are excellent examples of that.

Ray tracing and image sharpening

Nvidia’s original RTX Turing release focused more onray tracingand the hardware that enables it than raw performance. While today, we know the RTX cards are great for all sorts of gaming tasks, they remain the only commercial GPUs available that support the new lighting standard. There are only a few games that support it, even as we approach the end of 2019, but the fact remains: The RTX 2060 Super can doray tracing. The RX 5700 XT cannot … at least for now.

It can also offer deep-learning super sampling in supported games, which can help improve image quality and framerates in select cases. AMD’s card can’t do that either, but it does have AMD’s new Fidelity FX and Image Sharpening effects, which can improve visual quality in a much wider selection of games, but without the FPS improvement of DLSS. AMD’s cards also offer a new anti-lag feature for faster gamer inputs.

The 5700 XT is great … if you buy third party

AMD’s new RDNA-based 5700 graphics cards are far less of a dominating force than its new Ryzen CPUs, but they’re not bad either. The 5700 XT is competitively priced with the RTX 2060 Super and it performs comparably, if not far quicker in some instances, despite being the same price.

The RTX 2060 Super does offer entry-levelray tracingsupport and hardware-accelerated DLSS. If you like other Nvidia features like G-Sync, Reshade support in drivers, and its NULL lag-killing gaming technology, then it’s the card for you for sure.

But the RX 5700 XT, especially with improved third-party cooling, offers greater performance for your money. It also has AMD technologies that are often just as good as the Nvidia alternative. Things like FreeSync, its own latency-reduction tech, and Fidelity FX image sharpening.

Overall, it’s a very close run race between these two cards, but for now, at least, the RX 5700 XT gives slightly more for your money.

Should I buy RTX 2060 Super or RX 5700 XT?

Go with the AMD RX 5700 XT for better raw performance It might not offer ray tracing and DLSS 2.0, but AMD's RX 5700 XT is a solid performer available at a lower price than the RTX 2060 Super. The RX 5700 XT is a budget-wise performance GPU that genuinely excels at 1440p.

Which is better Rx 5700 or RTX 2060?

All the titles other than Assassins' Creed see the RX 5700 take a solid lead over the RTX 2060, as expected. On average, the Navi GPU is 15-20% faster than the budget RTX card at 1080p, with AMD favored games extending that delta to as much as 30%.

Which is better RX 5700 XT or RTX 2070 Super?

For most gamers targeting 1080p or 1440p the Radeon RX 5700 XT offers the best value, but if you're seeking maximum performance at 1440p or beyond, then the 2070 Super might be worth spending a little extra on. Either way you can't go wrong as both GPUs deliver exceptional performance.

What is the RX 5700 XT equivalent to?

The battle of last-gen GPUs comes down to two graphics cards: AMD's Radeon RX 5700 XT and Nvidia's RTX 2070 Super. Both cards deliver excellent performance at full HD and 1440p, and they're not too expensive (if you can find one in stock).