Skip to main content

AMD RX 5700 XT card is better than a GTX 1080 at ray tracing in new Crytek demo

Neon Noir - Real Time Ray Tracing On Radeon RX 5700XT

AMD cards can’t do ray tracing. That’s what Nvidia would like you to think. But while they lack the RT cores that Nvidia’s high-end RTX cards have, AMD’s GPUs are more than capable of rendering ray-traced lighting effects; the game or demo just needs to be hardware agnostic. That’s what we can see with Crytek’s Neon Noir demo, which is now set to release to the public, letting AMD users see just how capable their red-team cards are at rendering ray-traced lighting. Spoiler, they’re actually not bad at it.

If you want the cheat sheet, WCCFTech managed to get some hands-on time with the demo ahead of its public release and tested a number of Nvidia GTX and RTX, as well as AMD RX, graphics cards, to see how capable they are at ray tracing. As you might expect, the Nvidia RTX 2080 Ti was at the top, followed by the other top RTX cards; the 2080 Super, 2070 Super, 2060 Super, and 2060. But after that, AMD’s cards start nudging their way into the rankings, beating out capable last-generation GTX 10-series GPUs.

In the WCCFTech testing, the RX 5700 XT managed an average of 49 frame per second (FPS) at 1440p, with the 99th percentile at 28 FPS. The GTX 1080, on the other hand, managed just 41 FPS on average and the same 28 FPS for the 99th percentile. These results aren’t far behind the RTX 2060, which has some hardware-accelerating RT cores onboard. It had an average FPS of 48, but a higher 99th percentile of 34.

From there the cards start to dip below comfortable frame rates, with 99th percentiles falling to the point where noticeable stuttering will be a problem. But at 1080p, even an AMD RX Vega 56 is perfectly capable, managing 51 FPS on average.

Crytek’s “mesh-based” ray tracing technology is still being developed and won’t become a part of the main Cryengine until 2020, but that could open up some exciting potential for new games if developers would rather make their ray tracing available to a wider hardware audience than just Nvidia card owners.

The Neon Noir demo will be publicly available by the close of November 13, giving anyone they want a chance to try it out. It’ll be downloadable from Crytek’s Marketplace.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
RTX-washing old PC games makes for an impressive tech demo, but not much else
A screenshot of Portal RTX with RTX on or off.

RTX-washing. It's our term for old PC games that have received glossy ray tracing effects. It's certainly makes for a neat tech demo, but if you're like me, you might wondering if there are any other benefits.

For Nvidia, it's clear why the company has invested in these games. After all, owning the most powerful GPU in the world isn't very exciting without some games that can take advantage of it -- and without these RTX-washed games, the RTX 4090 faces that situation.

Read more
Flex your GPU’s power with the best ray tracing PC games
Blades clashing in Bright Memory: Infinite.

Ray tracing is the lighting tech that defines the look of many modern AAA games. Demanding as it is, most of the best gaming desktops come with ray tracing-capable hardware, allowing you to experience the most graphically demanding technique games currently have access to.

Just because a game has great graphics doesn't mean it's a great showcase of ray tracing, though. For example, Hitman 3's ray tracing update was a disappointment. We catered our list toward games that best showcase ray tracing, so you can use them for bragging rights or just to see what your PC is capable of.

Read more