![]() ![]() ASUS ROG Swift PG279Q 27? IPS QuadHD (2560 x 1440) 165Hz 4ms G-Sync Monitor for testing games at 1440p resolution.ASUS TUF Gaming VG289Q 28? IPS UltraHD (3840×2160) 60Hz 5ms FreeSync Monitor for testing games at 2160p resolution.Corsair RM850x, 850W 80PLUS Gold power supply unit.AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT (Reference) 12GB, stock clocks, on loan from AMD.T-FORCE XTREEM ARGB WHITE 32GB DDR4 (2×16GB, dual-channel at 3600 MHz CL14 XMP), supplied by TeamGroup.ASUS PRIME Z690-P D4 motherboard (Intel Z690 chipset, v.1008 BIOS).12th Gen Intel Core i9-12900K (Hyper-Threading/Turbo boost on stock settings). ![]() Benching Methodology Test Configuration – Hardware The games tested, settings, and hardware, are identical except for the drivers we compare. Our testing platform is a recent Windows 11 64-bit Pro Edition installation, an i9-12900K with stock clocks, an ASUS PRIME Z690-P D4 motherboard, and 32GB of T-FORCE XTREEM ARGB WHITE DDR4 3600MHz. Our AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT (Reference, RDNA 2.0 GPU micro-architecture). This latest Radeon Software Adrenalin 22.7.1 Optional driver was released on July 26 primarily to introduce new AMD Noise Suppression technology, expanded hardware support for Radeon Super Resolution upscaling technology, OpenGL performance optimization, and other enhancements. We perform all tests using the same game version and OS build. We benchmark the Optional Adrenalin 22.7.1 driver released a few days ago versus our previously recommended driver 22.6.1. This review showcases the latest reference Radeon RX 6700 XT’s Adrenalin driver performance with 17 PC games. 22.6.1 – 17 games benchmarked using the RX 6700 XT ![]() Adrenalin 22.7.1 Driver Performance Analysis – 22.7.1 vs. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |