I was going to say that too. XFX cards, in my experience, tend to be solid and well-built.I would go with the XFX card. Better build quality and warranty.
even i wud go with the XFX card. Better build quality and also gives a warranty.
That's not good!! I need to call their support group, as my 6700xt won't turn on. To quote the Witcher: F$^%!!!Even after all the shady stuff they were caught doing a few months ago?
Eh, ASRock coolers aren't the best, their 5700XT cooler was pretty crappy. XFX may be big, but that typically means they'll be quiet. It'll fit into any enthusiast case so I don't think size is an issue.I would without a doubt take the ASRock of those two. There is no reasonable excuse for a midrange GPU to be as massive as that XFX is, it's ridiculous and may very well limit your case options and resell opportunities, and that massive hunk of plastic isn't going to cool a ~230 watt GPU any better. I would have passed on my XFX 6900XT if I hadn't been going to pull it's cooler off anyway for a waterblock. There is no reason to make coolers that extend well beyond the videocard's pcb, virtually no one uses the pci-e slots below the GPU anymore. Build them thicker if necessary, not longer.
I had to remove a drive cage to get my 6700xt to fit. That thing is longer than my 3090 FE.Eh, ASRock coolers aren't the best, their 5700XT cooler was pretty crappy. XFX may be big, but that typically means they'll be quiet. It'll fit into any enthusiast case so I don't think size is an issue.
It'll fit into any enthusiast case so I don't think size is an issue.
I had to remove a drive cage to get my 6700xt to fit. That thing is longer than my 3090 FE.
I would go with the XFX card. Better build quality and warranty.
I was going to say that too. XFX cards, in my experience, tend to be solid and well-built.
I have had 1x Powercolor RX380, it died and was replaced under warranty. Powercolor's warrantee service was good.XFX used to be good, with double lifetime warranties. Even before that, back in the day, they used to be premier Nvidia partner as well, similar to BFG, and then switched to AMD/ATI partner with the launch of the first DX11 cards, the 5870 and 5850. Now I would not consider them much, plus what has been mentioned already.
Currently, best AMD GPU brands are generally Sapphire and Powercolor IMO. I would also consider others, such as ASrock, MSI, and Asus. Depends on the individual model though, one needs to do the research and look at reviews for cooling, PCB quality, software/firmware features, etc.
Then there is also Aorus/Gigabyte, but I don't think they have been making great GPUs recently, especially on the AMD side. One might even say they have had a lot of issues in general as of recent, such as with their PSUs.
I do currently like MSI a fair bit for motherboards now and in the past (I think I prefer their UEFI design best) but I don't have much experience with their GPUs. I had an MSI GTX 1070 Gaming X before, which did fine, and I then sold it to a friend, who I think still uses it. This is the only MSI video card I can think of having an experience with.