Recommended System Requirements | ||
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Game | Radeon RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC 4GB | GeForce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB |
Cyberpunk 2077 | 9% | 53% |
Hitman 3 | 42% | 99% |
Resident Evil 8 | 9% | 53% |
Assassins Creed: Valhalla | 0% | 40% |
FIFA 21 | 45% | 23% |
Grand Theft Auto VI | 54% | 115% |
Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War | 3% | 35% |
Genshin Impact | 9% | 53% |
Far Cry 6 | 58% | 121% |
The Medium | 37% | 91% |
In terms of overall gaming performance, the graphical capabilities of the AMD Radeon RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC 4GB are significantly better than the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB.
The GTX 1050 Ti has a 122 MHz higher core clock speed than the RX 570, but the RX 570 has 80 more Texture Mapping Units than the GTX 1050 Ti. As a result, the RX 570 exhibits a 87.6 GTexel/s better Texture Fill Rate than the GTX 1050 Ti. This still holds weight but shader performance is generally more relevant, particularly since both of these GPUs support at least DirectX 10.
The GTX 1050 Ti has a 122 MHz higher core clock speed than the RX 570 and the same number of Render Output Units. This results in the GTX 1050 Ti providing 3.9 GPixel/s better pixeling performance. However, both GPUs support DirectX 9 or above, and pixeling performance is only really relevant when comparing older cards.
The RX 570 was released less than a year after the GTX 1050 Ti, and so they are likely to have similar driver support for optimizing performance when running the latest games.
Both GPUs exhibit very powerful performance, so it probably isn't worth upgrading from one to the other, as both are capable of running even the most demanding games at the highest settings.
The Radeon RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC 4GB and the GeForce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB have the same amount of video memory, but are likely to provide slightly different experiences when displaying game textures at high resolutions.
The RX 570 has 111.9 GB/sec greater memory bandwidth than the GTX 1050 Ti, which means that the memory performance of the RX 570 is massively better than the GTX 1050 Ti.
The Radeon RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC 4GB has 2048 Shader Processing Units and the GeForce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB has 768. However, the actual shader performance of the RX 570 is 2683 and the actual shader performance of the GTX 1050 Ti is 1443. The RX 570 having 1240 better shader performance and an altogether better performance when taking into account other relevant data means that the RX 570 delivers a massively smoother and more efficient experience when processing graphical data than the GTX 1050 Ti.
The RX 570 transistor size technology is 2 nm (nanometers) smaller than the GTX 1050 Ti. This means that the RX 570 is expected to run very slightly cooler and achieve higher clock frequencies than the GTX 1050 Ti.
The Radeon RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC 4GB requires 120 Watts to run and the GeForce GTX 1050 Ti 4GB requires 75 Watts. We would recommend a PSU with at least 450 Watts for the RX 570 and a PSU with at least 300 Watts for the GTX 1050 Ti. The RX 570 requires 45 Watts more than the GTX 1050 Ti to run. The difference is significant enough that the RX 570 may have a slight adverse affect on your yearly electricity bills in comparison to the GTX 1050 Ti.
Radeon RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC 4GB gets 51.6 FPS on Tom Clancys Ghost Recon Wildlands
Radeon RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC 4GB gets 95.3 FPS on Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus
Core Speed | 1168 MHz | vs | ![]() | 1290 MHz | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Boost Clock | 1310 MHz | vs | ![]() | 1392 MHz | |
Architecture | GCN 1.3 Polaris 20 XL | Pascal P107 | |||
OC Potential | - | vs | - | ||
Driver Support | - | vs | Great | ||
Release Date | 18 Apr 2017 | ![]() | vs | 18 Oct 2016 | |
GPU Link | GD Link | GD Link | |||
Approved | ![]() | ![]() | |||
Comparison |
1366x768 | 10
|
![]() |
vs | ![]() |
10
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1600x900 | 10
|
![]() |
vs | ![]() |
10
|
1920x1080 | 10
|
![]() |
vs | 8.6
|
|
2560x1440 | 7.5
|
![]() |
vs | 6.2
|
|
3840x2160 | 5.7
|
![]() |
vs | 4.6
|
Memory | 4096 MB | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 4096 MB |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Memory Speed | 1750 MHz | vs | ![]() | 1752 MHz | |
Memory Bus | 256 Bit | ![]() | vs | 128 Bit | |
Memory Type | GDDR5 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | GDDR5 |
Memory Bandwidth | 224GB/sec | ![]() | vs | 112.1GB/sec | |
L2 Cache | 0 KB | vs | ![]() |
1024 KB | |
Delta Color Compression | no | vs | yes | ||
Memory Performance | 0% | ![]() |
vs | ![]() |
0% |
Comparison |
Shader Processing Units | 2048 | ![]() | vs | 768 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Actual Shader Performance | 100% | ![]() | vs | 69% | |
Technology | 14nm | ![]() | vs | 16nm | |
Texture Mapping Units | 128 | ![]() | vs | 48 | |
Texture Rate | 149.5 GTexel/s | ![]() | vs | 61.9 GTexel/s | |
Render Output Units | 32 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 32 |
Pixel Rate | 37.4 GPixel/s | vs | ![]() | 41.3 GPixel/s | |
Comparison |
Max Digital Resolution (WxH) | 4096x2160 | vs | ![]() | 7680x4320 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
VGA Connections | 0 | vs | 0 | ||
DVI Connections | 2 | ![]() | vs | 1 | |
HDMI Connections | 1 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 1 |
DisplayPort Connections | 1 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 1 |
Comparison |
Max Power | 120 Watts | vs | ![]() | 75 Watts | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Recommended PSU | 450 Watts & 30 Amps | vs | ![]() | 300 Watts & 27 Amps |
DirectX | 12.0 | vs | ![]() | 12.1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shader Model | 5.0 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 5 |
Open GL | 4.5 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 4.5 |
Open CL | - | vs | - | ||
Notebook GPU | no | no | |||
SLI/Crossfire | no | vs | no | ||
Dedicated | yes | ![]() | vs | ![]() | yes |
Comparison |
Recommended Processor | AMD Ryzen R5 1600X | vs | ![]() | Intel Core i5-6500 3.2GHz | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Recommended RAM | 8 GB | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 8 GB |
Maximum Recommended Gaming Resolution | 1920x1080 | ![]() | vs | ![]() | 1920x1080 |
Performance Value | ![]() |
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Mini Review | Overview First off we should point out that this is not the new AMD Vega graphics card line. These new AMD Radeon RX 500 series cards are an uprated version of the RX 400 series that they are replacing. This Asus RX 570 graphics card is one of the higher performance models from the new AMD Radeon RX 500 Series. The AMD Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC RX 570 4GB graphics card released in April 2017 as an AMD performance gaming graphics card. This card competes against Nvidia's GTX 1050 Ti and replaces the older Radeon RX 470. As a Polaris refresh, the RX 570 runs at a slightly faster clock speed than the RX 470. Architecture It is powered by the 14nm Pollaris 20 GPU, which has 2048 shader processing units, 128 TMUs and 32 ROPs. GPU The Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC RX 570 processing central unit runs at 1168MHz and goes up to 1310MHz, when the boost mode is triggered. The reference RX 570 card's boost clock is 1244MHz Memory The Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC RX 570 comes with a 4GB frame buffer of GDDR5, through a 256-bit memory interface, while the memory clock operates at 1750MHz. Power Consumption The Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC RX 570 has a rated board TDP of 120W, it requires at least a 400W PSU with one available 8-pin connector. Performance The AMD RX 570 Asus ROG Strix Gaming OC delivers a Mid/High graphical performance for 2017. with the RX570 capable of running most triple AAA titles released during 2017 on medium to high graphics settings at a 1080p screen resolution. With some adjustments and lowering anti aliasing this RX570 4GB card can confidently maintain 60+ frames per seconds on high graphic settings at 1080p. Moving to 1440p screen resolution and the graphics card may need to be adjusted down to medium in order to maintain 50-60+ fps. System Suggestions The RX 570 is best suited for resolutions up to and including 1920x1080. We recommend a mid range R5 Ryzen processor and at least 8GB of system memory for optimal gaming performance from the RX 570. | Overview GeForce GTX 1050 Ti is one of Nvidia's lower end graphics card. It is competing against AMDs more affordable gaming cards, like the newer RX 470. Architecture The Pascal Architecture aims for twice as much performance as the Maxwell Architecture and introduces support for second gen HBM. GPU It equips a GPU codenamed GP107-400 which has 6 SM activated and 768 Shader Processing Units, 48 TMUs and 32 ROPs. The central unit runs at 1290MHz and goes up to 1392MHz when the Boost Clock is triggered in game. Memory The GPU accesses a 4GB frame buffer of fast GDDR5, through a 128-bit memory interface, while the Memory Clock Operates at 3504MHz. Power Consumption With a rated board TDP of 75W, it relies entirely on the PCI Slot for power, meaning no extra connectors are required. Performance The GTX 1050 Ti will enable mid level graphics performance on modern AAA 2016 released games. Although there will be variations on this frame rate we expect this card to deliver around 55+ FPS on medium graphics settings at a 1080p screen resolution. Comparatively, this card will be faster than the performance of the outgoing GTX 960 System Suggestions GeForce GTX 1050 Ti is best suited for resolutions up to and including 1920x1080. We recommend a modern CPU like the i5-6500 and 8GB of RAM for minimal system bottleneck. |
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Recommended CPU | |||||
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Possible GPU Upgrades | |||||
GPU Variants | - | - |