this post was submitted on 25 May 2024
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I actually agree. The 6700 XT, for example, was supposed to compete with the 3070, but instead, it barely surpassed the 3060ti in real world tests.
But I agree with your main point, and I'd trade that slight drop in performance per dollar for a better experience on Linux. I'm planning my exit strategy from Windows, and I'm still working on accepting that my Nvidia card just won't feel as nice (until NVK is more mature).
An Nvidia 3070 costs 420 and benchmarks at 22,403 (benchmark point per dollar 53.34) An AMD 6800 costs 360 and benchmarks at 22,309 (benchmark point per dollar 61.97)
So you get a 0.4% drop in performance for a 14.3% drop in price. That is significantly more performance per dollar.
Or if you go with a 3070ti ($500 23,661 -> 47.32) vs a 7800 XT ($500 23,998 -> 47.97) you get a 1.4% performance increase for free (not really that significant I know, but still it's free performance)
All of the numbers were taken from https://www.videocardbenchmark.net/high_end_gpus.html
My numbers were taken from a comparison of real world performance via gameplay (FPS comparisons), not artificial benchmark scores, but those prices are still really good.
6800 is better than a 3070 in both artificial benchmarks and real-world ones, and the fact that it's cheaper means it's certainly the better option for performance per dollar (somewhere between a 3070ti and a 3080).
Here's an old graph I still have saved: