Skip to main content

RX 6700 XT vs. 6800 XT vs. 6900 XT

AMD’s RDNA 2 graphics cards are the most impressive it’s made in years. They compete with Nvidia’s best in price and performance, and offer real-time ray tracing support for the first time on AMD hardware. Aside from the issues with actually getting ahold of one of these cards, they’re a great option if you’re looking to upgrade your graphics card. But which one offers the best value for the money?

Whether you’re targeting high frame rate 1440p gaming or need something that will make your PC 4K-ready, let’s take a look at how the top AMD RX 6000 GPUs compare to find the best one for you.

Pricing and availability

AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT
AMD

AMD launched the RX 6800 XT and 6800 graphics cards on November 18, 2020, with launch prices of $649 and $579, respectively. They swiftly flew off the shelves due to the conglomerate issues of global silicon shortages, cryptocurrency miners buying up any GPUs they can find, and gamers being genuinely excited about the new-generation performance. Since then, prices have soared at both retailers and on secondhand markets, whereby you can expect to spend upwards of $800 on either card if buying new or well over $1,000 if buying on eBay or in classified ads.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Similar problems awaited the 6900 XT, which launched on December 8 for $1,000. In early 2021, it is just as hard to find either of the 6800 cards, regularly selling for upwards of $1,500 at retail or over $2,000 on eBay.

With that in mind, the RX 6700 XT faces a troubling launch when it goes on sale on March 18. AMD reference cards will sell for $479, with third-party cards likely to sell for $500 to $600, depending on clock speeds and cooling configurations, but how long that will last remains unclear. There are strong rumors that stock of the 6700 XT will be extremely limited at launch, with some major market countries receiving just several hundred of them on launch day. That will only exacerbate problems with price gouging and scalping, though AMD has pledged to release its reference cards in batches to try to help gamers get their hands on the card at a reasonable price.

Performance

The RX 6700 XT, 6800 XT, and 6900 XT are all tiered GPUs, so real-world performance will very much flow upwards in the same direction as price. How that translates to bang for your buck, though, is an important consideration. The 6900 XT and 6800 XT are relatively well-known properties at this point, where the 6700 XT’s capabilities can only be surmised from AMD’s first-party benchmarks. Those do typically prove quite accurate, but they will have some inherent bias, so it’s important to wait for third-party reviews and test results before drawing a concrete conclusion.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

That said, we can take a look at the existing performance numbers and specifications to speculate about what the new card will be capable of and how it will compare with its more expensive RDNA 2 cousins.

RX 6700 XT RX 6800 XT RX 6900 XT
GPU Navi 22 Navi 21 Navi 21
Interface PCI Express 4.0 PCI Express 4.0 PCI Express 4.0
GPU cores 2,560 stream processors 4,608 stream processors 5,120 stream processors
Ray tracing cores 40 72 80
Base clock 2,321 MHz 1,825 MHz 1,825 MHz
Game clock 2,424 MHz 2,015 MHz 2,015 MHz
Boost clock 2,581 MHz 2,250MHz 2,250MHz
Memory 12GB GDDR6 + 96MB Infinity Cache 16GB GDDR6 + 128MB Infinity Cache 16GB GDDR6 + 128MB Infinity Cache
Memory bus 192-bit 256-bit 256-bit
Bandwidth 384GBps 512GBps 512GBps
TDP 230 watts 300 watts 300 watts

The 6900 XT is the big daddy of the three cards and will hold firm on its claim of being one of the (if not the leading) fastest graphics cards in the world at general rasterization. It typically only offers around 5% to 12% better real-world gaming performance over the 6800 XT, however, which is substantially cheaper (or at least it’s supposed to be), despite having a notably higher number of stream processors and typically operating at higher clock speeds.

RX 6800 comparison
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The 6800 XT can manage most modern AAA games at well above 60 frames per second at 4K resolution and above 100 fps in many more at 1440p. The 6900 XT achieves a little more, although its cost is far higher than its performance benefits warrant.

This puts those cards as relative competitors of Nvidia’s RTX 3090 and RTX 3080. The RX 6700 XT, with its substantially reduced stream processor count but much higher clock speed, is destined to go toe to toe with Nvidia’s RTX 3070. Where the 6800 (non-XT) might beat out the Nvidia card in a number of scenarios, though, the battle with Nvidia’s gold standard midrange card and the 6700 XT should be far more fierce.

AMD’s first-party testing results — shown at the 6700 XT reveal — suggested that it would handily beat the RTX 3060 Ti and often pip the RTX 3070 in a number of popular games. Where it couldn’t win outright, it was very competitive, with AMD leaning heavily into the idea that this is a flagship 1440P gaming graphics card.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

In these sorts of games and with this sort of power, it’s unlikely that the 6700 XT would be an ideal 1440P card for high frame rate (100+ fps) gaming, but it’s certainly a solid contender for smooth AAA gaming at that resolution. Its 12GB of memory will give it a potential leg up over the Nvidia competition, too, but with its narrower memory bus, it may struggle at 4K resolution compared to its beefier RDNA 2 siblings.

The high clock speed it can support, however, shows some possible exciting performance potential. With a much lower TDP, it will be interesting to see if powerful cooling means that the gap between the 6700 XT and 6800 XT can be closed with sufficient overclocking.

Ray tracing and more

Ray tracing is supported on all new-generation RDNA2 graphics cards, thanks to a new ray accelerator portion of every compute unit. It’s not as powerful a solution as Nvidia’s RT cores, and Nvidia will retain a ray-tracing performance advantage this generation (especially with deep-learning super-sampling enabled), but you can at least turn on some low-level ray-traced lighting with the AMD 6000 series to enjoy the feature at lower frame rates. The 6700 XT will be the weakest of the bunch at it, with its more limited accelerator count, so it may not be the most-used feature — at least, not until AMD’s own DLSS alternative, Super Resolution debuts, but it’s nice to have the feature nonetheless.

The 6800 XT and 6900 XT, in comparison, offer a more robust ray tracing offering, with performance reaching close to that of a 2080 Ti. That means 4K ray tracing at decent frame rates is possible, though not the smoothest. That further cements the difference between AMD’s cards in the new generation. The 6700 XT is targeting 1440P, whereas the 6800 XT and 6900 XT are much more focused on 4K.

All of these cards can also take advantage of AMD’s Fidelity FX sharpening and anti-lag features. Rage Mode will help them all hit slightly higher clock speeds with automated overclocking, and Radeon Boost and Variable Rate Shading should enable higher frame rates without too noticeable a drop in visual quality. As these are software features, rather than hardware-accelerated features, the effect should be largely down to the software rather than the hardware. That said, if the 6700 XT experiences any specific bottlenecks with its weaker hardware arrangement, it may be that it sees a greater percentile improvement in its use in certain titles.

Each of these GPUs can also take advantage of Smart Access Memory if you have a Ryzen 3000 or 5000 CPU (and a 500-series motherboard) for a modest but notable performance improvement.

Buy what you can get

With quite clear definitions of what these cards are for, it’s almost an easy recommendation: If you want to play at 1440p at relatively high frame rates, the 6700 XT will be more than enough to get the job done. If you want to game at higher frame rates or 4K, the 6800 XT is a better bet, and if you have deep pockets, the 6900 XT will give you the highest performance at a steep premium.

But none of that really matters when none of these cards can be purchased at a fair price. With stock non-existent for existing 6800 XT and 6900 XT cards, the 6700 XT will either have to arrive in enormously high numbers to meet demand, or it too will suffer the same fate of being out of stock and overpriced when not.

The graphics card market for gamers in 2021 is a wasteland, and it really is a question of buying what you can get because you probably won’t get another chance. If you see any of these cards at close to MSRP and need a new GPU this year, then get them. You could always sell them later at a profit if it’s too much cost to swallow. Alternatively, and probably better yet, wait this generation out, or at least wait until later in the year when better stock becomes available and Intel’s own GPUs may have shaken up (or perhaps even helped stabilize) the market once again.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
The sad reality of AMD’s next-gen GPUs comes into view
The AMD RX 7900 graphics card on a pink background.

For months now, various leakers agreed on one thing -- AMD is tapping out of the high-end GPU race in this generation, leaving Nvidia to focus on making the best graphics cards with no competitor. Today's new finding may confirm that theory, as the first RDNA 4 GPU to make an official appearance is one that has been speculated about for months: Navi48.

Following the typical naming convention for AMD, the flagship in the RDNA 4 generation should have been called Navi41 -- and it very well might have been, but according to various sources, that GPU will not be making an appearance in this generation. Hence, the flagship is now said to be the Navi48, and the latest finding shared by Kepler_L2 on X tells us that might indeed be the case.

Read more
Everything you need to know about buying a GPU in 2024
RTX 4090.

The graphics card, also known as the GPU, is arguably one of the most exciting components in any PC build. Alongside the processor, your graphics card often has the greatest impact on the overall performance of your PC. That makes it a pretty high-stakes purchase, especially if you consider that GPUs can get pretty expensive.

The GPU market has a lot to offer, and that's regardless of your needs and your budget. Whether you're aiming for something super cheap to support some light browsing or a behemoth to handle the most GPU-intensive games, you have lots of options. In this guide, we'll show you what to look out for so that you can pick the best GPU that fits your budget and needs.
Nvidia, AMD, or Intel?
Consumer graphics cards are generally split into two categories -- integrated and discrete graphics. Since you're here, you're most likely looking for a discrete (or dedicated) GPU, and that's what we're going to focus on in this article.

Read more
What is VSync, and why do you need it?
HP Omen 40L Gaming PC on a table connected to a monitor.

If you’ve been playing PC games for a number of years, you’ve probably heard the term ‘VSync’ tossed around once or twice. Maybe you’ve also heard of G-Sync and FreeSync. For those unaware, VSync is actually short for ‘vertical synchronization’. This is a display feature that is designed to keep your gaming screen running in sync with your computer's GPU. VSync isn’t just important for PC gaming, but it’s one of the most important criteria that goes into a good gaming display.

In this article, we’re going to take a closer look at VSync (and its related technologies) to find out exactly how it works, if you should have it enabled, and how to disable it if you don’t like the optimization. 
What is VSync technology?

Read more