
Starting with Dying Light 2, we find very competitive performance between these two GPUs and quite surprisingly it's the RTX 3070 that does best at 1080p, winning by a 7% margin. Let's now take a closer look to some of the result highlights of about a dozen of games and then we'll show you how these two GPUs compare head-to-head across all 50 games tested in a single graph.
Amd radeon hd 6700 series benchmark driver#
The driver used were Radeon Adrenalin 22.2.3 and GeForce Game Ready Driver 511.79.
Amd radeon hd 6700 series benchmark windows#
Both GPUs were tested at 1080p, 1440p, and 4K across 50 games, using Windows 11. We're also testing with Resizable Bar enabled for these head to heads, so it will be interesting to see how much of a difference all these changes make.įor testing we're using a Ryzen 9 5950X test system with 32GB of DDR4-3200 CL14 dual-rank, dual-channel memory. That means the 3070 is priced ~40% higher than the 6700 XT right now, which is obviously a significant markup, even if the GeForce GPU was ~10% faster last time we compared them over a year ago in a 45 game benchmark.Ī lot has changed since then, we've seen numerous driver updates from both camps, along with significant game updates and new releases such as Forza Horizon 5, God of War, Dying Light 2, Warhammer III, Halo Infinite, Rainbow Six Extraction, and the list goes on. Similarly, only three months ago the lowest price on an RTX 3070 was $1,100 and now they are closer to $900, with a Gigabyte model selling for just $850.

That's still well over MSRP, but pricing has come down considerably in recent weeks. The point is though, these two GPUs are meant to be direct competitors, though current pricing is more favorable towards the 6700 XT as demand for Nvidia GPUs is usually higher.Īs of writing, it's possible to purchase a Radeon 6700 XT for as little as $600, though most models are priced between $700 and $800.

Five months later AMD hit back with the 6700 XT at $480, which was another paper MSRP that never reached most prospective buyers. The RTX 3070 was released in October 2020 at an MSRP of $500, which of course we never really saw. Now that GPU prices are taking a breather and hopefully we'll only see more accessible graphics cards moving forward (and crossing fingers), let's take an updated look at the battle between the GeForce RTX 3070 and Radeon RX 6700 XT.
