Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedJoin us on Floatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/HardwareUnboxedBuy relevant products ...
Turing had DLSS 2 support at that point already while AMD didn’t even have FSR1 out yet.
No it didn’t, DLSS 2 didn’t exist until 2020.
Turing supports RT. RDNA1 does not.
RT was never relevant on a 2060 Super, it’s too slow even without RT to ever make it worth turning RT on. Anyone who wasn’t drinking the kool-aid knew that RT’s demands were going to outstrip the first generation hardware, that’s how it always works with new technology.
Turing is DX12 Ultimate compliant. RDNA1 was not.
Which has been completely irrelevant until now, when it only matters in a single game.
This “everyone” who knew Turing would age better have been proven completely wrong, the 5700 XT still murders the 2060 Super in the vast majority of games over 4 years later.
Everyone?
No it didn’t, DLSS 2 didn’t exist until 2020.
RT was never relevant on a 2060 Super, it’s too slow even without RT to ever make it worth turning RT on. Anyone who wasn’t drinking the kool-aid knew that RT’s demands were going to outstrip the first generation hardware, that’s how it always works with new technology.
Which has been completely irrelevant until now, when it only matters in a single game.
This “everyone” who knew Turing would age better have been proven completely wrong, the 5700 XT still murders the 2060 Super in the vast majority of games over 4 years later.
5700XT is comparable to a 2070/2080 in most games other than Alan Wake 2. Digital Foundry even suggests this in one of their videos.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QrXoDon6fXs&t=347s