We don’t need a long intro for this one: AMD’s new Radeon RX 7600 XT is almost exactly the same as last year’s RX 7600, but with a mild bump to the GPU’s clock speed and 16GB of memory instead of 8GB. It also costs $329 instead of $269, the current MSRP (and current street price) for the regular RX 7600.

It’s a card with a pretty narrow target audience: people who are worried about buying a GPU with 8GB of memory, but who aren’t worried enough about future-proofing or RAM requirements to buy a more powerful GPU. It’s priced reasonably well, at least—$60 is a lot to pay for extra memory, but $329 was the MSRP for the Radeon RX 6600 back in 2021. If you want more memory in a current-generation card, you otherwise generally need to jump up into the $450 range (for the 12GB RX 7700 XT or the 16GB RTX 4060 Ti) or beyond.

RX 7700 XT
RX 7600
RX 7600 XT
RX 6600
RX 6600 XT
RX 6650 XT
RX 6750 XT

Compute units (Stream processors)
54 (3,456)
32 (2,048)
32 (2,048)
28 (1,792)
32 (2,048)
32 (2,048)
40 (2,560)

Boost Clock
2,544 MHz
2,600 MHz
2,760 MHz
2,490 MHz
2,589 MHz
2,635 MHz
2,600 MHz

Memory Bus Width
192-bit
128-bit
128-bit
128-bit
128-bit
128-bit
192-bit

Memory Clock
2,250 MHz
2,250 MHz
2,250 MHz
1,750 MHz
2,000 MHz
2,190 MHz
2,250 MHz

Memory size
12GB GDDR6
8GB GDDR6
16GB GDDR6
8GB GDDR6
8GB GDDR6
8GB GDDR6
12GB GDDR6

Total board power (TBP)
245 W
165 W
190 W
132 W
160 W
180 W
250 W

The fact of the matter is that this is the same silicon we’ve already seen. The clock speed bumps do provide a small across-the-board performance uplift, and the impact of the extra RAM does become apparent in a few of our tests. But the card doesn’t fundamentally alter the AMD-vs-Nvidia-vs-Intel dynamic in the $300-ish graphics card market, though it addresses a couple of the regular RX 7600’s most glaring weaknesses.

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