AMD Radeon RX 560 4GB Review: 1080p Gaming On The Cheap
Why you can trust Tom's Hardware
Doom (Vulkan)
Radeon RX 560 benefits more in Doom from its shading/texturing advantage than in either of the prior two games: it beats the RX 460 by 10% through our 60-second benchmark.
Moreover, the RX 560 is >15% faster than GeForce GTX 1050, landing closer to the GTX 1050 Ti. Driver optimizations have helped Nvidia close its deficit in Doom somewhat through 2017. But AMD still dominates under Vulkan.
If you want access to better-looking details at playable frame rates, a Radeon RX 570 can definitely make that happen. Just be ready to pay $75 or $80 (£70) more than its launch price. Conversely, a Radeon RX 550 gives up way too much performance. The RX 560 really does hit a value sweet spot for competent 1080p gaming.
MORE: Best Graphics Cards
MORE: Desktop GPU Performance Hierarchy Table
MORE: All Graphics Content
Stay On the Cutting Edge: Get the Tom's Hardware Newsletter
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
AMD rakes in cash with best quarterly revenue ever amid datacenter business rise, but gaming business craters
AMD says RDNA 4 GPUs are coming in early 2025 — RX 8000 will deliver ray tracing improvements, AI capabilities
AMD research suggests plans to catch up to Nvidia using neural supersampling and denoising for real-time path tracing
-
RomeoReject Cutting it by $20 would make it a $100 card. They'd likely be losing money at that price point.Reply -
firerod1 20235344 said:Cutting it by $20 would make it a $100 card. They'd likely be losing money at that price point.
I meant this card since it’s 1050 ti price while offering 1050 performance. -
cryoburner ...we couldn’t wait to see how Radeon RX 560 improved upon it.
Is that why you waited almost half a year to review the card? :3 -
shrapnel_indie 20235672 said:...we couldn’t wait to see how Radeon RX 560 improved upon it.
Is that why you waited almost half a year to review the card? :3
Did you read the review?
At the beginning of the conclusion:
The pace at which new hardware hit our lab this summer meant we couldn’t review all of AMD’s Radeon RX 500-series cards consecutively.
-
Wisecracker 4GB on the Radeon RX 560 = "Mining Card"Reply
The minimal arch (even with the extra CUs) can't use 4GB for gaming like the big brother 570. The 2GB RX 560 even trades blows with its 4GB twin, along with the 2GB GTX 1050, at the $110-$120 price point for the gamer bunch.
Leave the RX 560 4GB for the "Entrepreneurial Capitalist" crowd ...
-
bit_user I think your power dissipation for the 1050 Ti is wrong. While I'm sure some OC'd model use more, there are 1050 Ti's with 75 W TDP.Reply
Also, I wish the RX 560 came in a low-profile version, like the RX 460 did (and the GTX 1050 Ti does). This excludes it from certain applications. It's the most raw compute available at that price & power dissipation. -
senzffm123 correct, i got one of those 1050 TI with 75 W TDP in my rig, doesnt have a power connector as well. hell of a card!Reply -
turkey3_scratch My RX 460 I bought for $120 back in the day (well, not that far back). There were some for $90 I remember, too. Seems like just an RX 460. Well, it is basically an RX 460.Reply -
jdwii Man Amd what is up with your GPU division for the first time ever letting Nvidia walk all over you in performance per dollar, performance per watt and overall performance, this is very sad.Reply
Whatever Amd is doing with their architecture and leadership in the GPU division needs to change. I can't even think of a time 2 years ago and before where nvidia ever offered a better value.