Review : Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition

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Synthetic benchmarks:

Our first series of tests will be dedicated to synthetic benchmarks. These are often used for overclocking competitions but are also very interesting to compare different GPUs. So we will focus on the 3DMark benchmarks.

We will test the following benchmarks:

  • Fire Strike (1080p)
  • Fire Strike Ultra (2160p)
  • Time Spy (1440p)
  • Time Spy Extreme (2160p)
  • 3DMark Speed Way
  • DirectX Raytracing
  • Intel XeSS
  • Mesh Shader

3DMark Fire Strike and Fire Strike Ultra :

Let’s start with 3DMark Fire Strike, which is one of the most used benchmarks today. It consists of two graphics tests, a CPU test and a fourth test that combines GPU and CPU. Don’t forget to deactivate the demo which doesn’t bring anything in the final score and prolongs the benchmark duration (unnecessarily). The version used for these tests is of course the latest one

The first benchmark that we carry out with this Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition and the least we can say is that it starts very strong! It takes the lead over the NVIDIA RTX 4080 with 1391 points.

The same is true under Fire Strike Ultra, where our Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition remains in second place, but this time widens the gap with the NVIDIA RTX 4080.

3DMark Time Spy and Time Spy Extreme:

The second test is 3DMark Time Spy. Although this one is done in 1440p, it has the particularity of using DirectX 12. It consists of two graphical tests and a CPU test. As for Fire Strike, don’t forget to disable the demo. These two first benchmarks are proposed by UL Benchmark.

The performance obtained in Time Spy is often representative of what we will get in games. The first five cards from the new generation stand out against the previous generations. If the performance of our Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition is confirmed, we may have excellent performance in games.

Under 3DMark Time Spy Extreme, same observation even if the RX 7900 XT is more behind the RXT 4080. On the other hand, the Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition keeps its second place. As we can also see, the RTX 4090 is untouchable.

3DMark Speed Way

The latest benchmark from Ulbenchmark and it’s nice to be able to say that we’re going to have a good time on this Speed Way. It uses DirectX 12 and is by default in a 1440p definition. We have not modified anything and we use the original benchmark.

Here our Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition is in third place. The benchmark uses Ray Tracing and seems to make our card suffer. We’ll see what happens in games when we enable Ray Tracing.

3DMark DirectX Raytracing :

UL Benchmarks has added a new test to its series of benchmarks to measure Ray Tracing performance. The idea will be to use the 3DMark DirectX Raytracing test to compare the performance of Ray Tracing hardware dedicated to AMD and NVIDIA graphics cards but now also to Intel!

The 3DMark DirectX Raytracing test is designed to make Ray Tracing the limiting factor. Instead of relying on traditional rendering, the entire scene is traced and drawn in one pass. The test result will depend entirely on the performance of the Ray Tracing. It will be easy to measure and compare the performance of the different cards between them.

This benchmark has always been dominated by NVIDIA cards and we know that AMD cards will have more difficulties. However, we can see the progress of this new generation since the Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition is almost at the level of the RTX 3080 Ti but very far from the RTX 4080. We can really judge the impact of Ray Tracing in our gaming benchmarks.

3DMark Intel XeSS

UL Benchmarks in collaboration with Intel will add this new benchmark to the 3DMark suite. We had early access to this new test for our testing. This Intel XeSS test is designed to evaluate and compare the performance and image quality of XeSS(Xe Super Sampling). There are four XeSS modes to choose from: Ultra Quality, Quality, Balanced and Performance. The 3DMark inspection tool helps you compare image quality with a side-by-side view of XeSS rendering and native resolution rendering. You need a graphics card that supports Intel XeSS to run this test.

So we’ll have two scores, a FPS number with XeSS disabled and then on the right with XeSS enabled. The mode chosen is “Ultra Quality” which is actually the default mode for the benchmark.

In this new benchmark, the good news is that the two cards seem to take advantage of the Xe Super Sampling technology which allows to boost the performance.

As we conclude this first round of synthetic testing, we are pleasantly surprised by the performance. The Powercolor RX 7900 XTX Red Devil Limited Edition is well ahead in benchmarks not using Ray Tracing but lags behind when it is active. We should have a good card for gaming and we will see how it will perform with Ray Tracing combined with FSR or XeSS.