In this series I will be using a lot of GeForce and Radeon series GPUs and comparing the frame rate of a particular game at once to show which GPU is the best option for me. The first is the classic Battle Royale FPS game “Apex Legends”.
The GPUs we set up are basically a high to mid range, with 14 GeForce and 7 Radeon, for a total of 21 video card types. The product names and specifications for the graphics processing unit and the video card on which it is installed are summarized at the end of the article, including the environment of the computer used.
Although it is a test case, the image quality is all set to the highest level. NVIDIA Reflex is disabled. Moreover, since the frame rate for this game is 144fps by default, the limitation is lifted with the “+fps_max unlimited” command. This can improve up to 300 frames per second.
Graphics settings for Apex Legends
Since this game does not have a benchmark mode, the frame rate is measured when moving a certain course in training mode using CapFrameX. The average frame rate for Full HD and 4K are published.
The best GPU depends on the frame rate the player wants. If you’re playing with a 4K/144Hz gaming LCD monitor, the RTX 3070 Ti or higher for the GeForce series and RX 6800 or higher for the Radeon series is recommended.
If you want to play with frame rate priority over resolutions like a Full HD/240Hz LCD, RTX 3060 Ti or higher for GeForce series, the RX 6600 XT or higher for Radeon series is a male.
As mentioned earlier, this game can only be played at up to 300 frames per second. So, if you’re playing in Full HD, GPUs averaging 299fps or more can be said to be over-engineered.
As the GPU gets lower, the frame rate gradually decreases, but I’d like to pay attention to the RTX 3060 Ti and RTX 3060 for the GeForce series, and the RT 6700 XT series and RX 6600 XT for the Radeon series. Either way, the frame rate drops significantly compared to other GPU grades. Not to mention the drop in the number of shaders, the memory bus width appears to have been narrowed down from 256 bits to 192 bits on the former and from 192 bits to 128 bits in the latter. The point is that the width of the memory bus is important to achieve a high frame rate in the game.
The typical screen refresh rate is 60Hz. Therefore, in the game, 60 frames per second is a guide for comfortable gameplay. Apex Legends isn’t that heavy in this respect, with a comfortable average frame rate enough for 4K gaming, except for the RTX 3050 and RX 5500 XT. It can be said that there is no problem to play normally on any Full HD GPU.
The computer used is a “G-Tune XP-Z” computer mouse with a Core i9-12900K processor.
The computer used in this series is a high-end computer gaming computer mouse.G-Tune XP-Z (Premium model)“he is.
The CPU uses a Core i9-12900K (16 cores, 24 threads), the motherboard uses the Z690 chipset, and the CPU cooler uses simple water cooling in the 36cm class. With a 1200W power supply, you don’t have to worry about combining it with any video card.
Regarding the CPU power limit, the Long Duratin Power Limit (PL1) is set to 125W and the Short Duratin Power Limit (PL2) is set to 241W.
List of used video cards
Many of the video cards used here run at rated clocks, but some OC models are also included (OC models have a higher boost clock than the one in parentheses in the GPU list).
The ASUS ROG STRIX series has a BIOS selector switch, but they’re all set to “P mode” for performance. There are some products that can increase the boost clock with the tool, but this time I didn’t use the tool and did the test in the default case.
Also, NVIDIA’s Resizable BAR and AMD Intelligent Access Memory are enabled on all GPUs that can be enabled.
GPU | product name | Shading Count (CUDA/SP) | Memory bus display | video memory | increase the clock (freeze) |
card power (freeze) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GeForce RTX 3090 | MSI GeForce RTX 3090 VENTUS 3X 24G | 10496 | 384 bit | GDDR6X 24 GB | 1,695MHz (1,695MHz) |
350 watts (350 watts) |
GeForce RTX 3080 Ti | MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ti VENTUS 3X 12G | 10,240 | 384 bit | GDDR6X 12 GB | 1,665MHz (1,665MHz) |
350 watts (350 watts) |
GeForce RTX 3080 | MSI GeForce RTX 3080 VENTUS 3X 10G | 8704 | 320 bit | GDDR6X 10 GB | 1710MHz (1,710MHz) |
320 watts (320 watts) |
GeForce RTX 3070 Ti | MSI GeForce RTX 3070 Ti VENTUS 3X 8G | 6,144 | 256bit | GDDR6X 8 GB | 1,770MHz (1,770MHz) |
290W (290W) |
GeForce RTX 3070 | MSI GeForce RTX 3070 VENTUS 2X OC | 5,888 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,755MHz (1,730MHz) |
220 watts (220 watts) |
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti | ZOTAC GeForce RTX 3060 Ti 8G GDDR6 HDMI / DP * 3 | 4864 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,665MHz (1,665MHz) |
200 watts (200 watts) |
GeForce RTX 3060 | ZOTAC GeForce RTX 3060 12G GDDR6 HDMI / DP * 3 | 3,584 | 192 bit | GDDR6 12 GB | 1,777MHz (1,777MHz) |
170 watts (170 watts) |
GeForce RTX 3050 | Manufacturer unknown GeForce RTX 3050 | 2560 | 128 bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,777MHz (1,777MHz) |
130 watts (130 watts) |
GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER | ASUSTeK ROG-STRIX-RTX2080S-A8G-GAMING | 3,072 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,830MHz (1,815MHz) |
250 watts (250 watts) |
GeForce RTX 2080 | ASUSTeK ROG-STRIX-RTX2080-O8G-GAMING | 2944 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,860MHz (1,710MHz) |
245W (215 watts) |
GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER | ASUSTeK ROG-STRIX-RTX2070S-A8G-GAMING | 2560 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,800MHz (1,770MHz) |
215 W (215 watts) |
GeForce RTX 2070 | ASUSTeK DUAL-RTX2070-O8G-MINI | 2,304 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,650MHz (1,620MHz) |
175W (175W) |
GeForce GTX 2060 SUPER | ASUSTeK DUAL-RTX2060S-O8G-EVO-V2 | 2,176 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,695MHz (1,650MHz) |
184 watts (160 watts) |
GeForce RTX 2060 | ASUSTeK DUAL-RTX2060-O6G-EVO | 1,920 | 192 bit | GDDR6 6GB | 1,755MHz (1,725MHz) |
183 watts (160 watts) |
Radeon RX 6900 XT | ASUSTeK TUF-RX6900XT-T16G-GAMING | 5120 | 256bit | GDDR6 16 GB | 2,335MHz (2250MHz) |
300 watts (300 watts) |
Radeon RX 6800 | Radeon RX 6800 . reference card | 3840 | 256bit | GDDR6 16 GB | 2,105MHz (2,105MHz) |
250 watts (250 watts) |
Radeon RX 6700 XT | Radeon RX 6700 XT . Reference Card | 2560 | 192 bit | GDDR6 12 GB | 2615MHz (2,581MHz) |
230W (230W) |
Radeon RX 6600 XT | ASUSTeK ROG-STRIX-RX6600XT-O8G-GAMING | 2,048 | 128 bit | GDDR6 8GB | 2,607MHz (2,359MHz) |
160 watts (160 watts) |
Radeon RX 5700 XT | ASUSTeK TUF 3-RX5700XT-O8G-GAMING | 2560 | 256bit | GDDR6 8GB | 1,905MHz (1,905MHz) |
225W (225W) |
Radeon RX 5600 XT | ASUSTeK ROG-STRIX-RX5600XT-O6G-GAMING | 2,304 | 192 bit | GDDR6 6GB | 1,750MHz (1,560MHz) |
150 watts (150 watts) |
Radeon RX 5500 XT | ASUSTeK DUAL-RX5500XT-O4G-EVO | 1,408 | 128 bit | GDDR6 4 GB | 1,845MHz (1,845MHz) |
130 watts (130 watts) |
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