MSI Radeon RX 6600 XT Gaming X review

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Introduction

Radeon RX 6600 XT review - MSI Gaming X 

AMD unveiled its next member of its RDNA 2-based graphics family, their Navi23-based graphics card(s)the 6600 XT. Historically, the 6600 series was positioned between entry-level and mainstream, generally in the 150–200 USD range. You now need to pay 379 USD for a graphics card aimed at the Full HD range. The cards, which are thus positioned as a 1920x1080 offering, and will include a GPU based on NAVI23. 

Radeon RX 6600 XT

The Navi 23 GPU-based graphics cards are manufactured on a 7nm process and have a maximum of 8 GB of gddr6 memory and are connected through a rather restricted 128-bit memory interface. 8 GB GDDR6 RAM will be used, buffered by a 32 MB Infinity Cache. The series card is projected to perform at the performance marker of the RX 5700 XT and GTX 1080 Ti, making it an excellent card at 1080p or good card at 1440p. The RX 6600 XT features 2048 stream processors, whereas the unknown RX 6600 is expected to include 1792 of them. Numerous firms have stated their own variants and setups of the card. We've mapped the major specs below to help you see what to expect.

The "Navi 23 XT" chip is not new; it is already in use as the Radeon RX 6600M graphics solution for notebooks, which was introduced with the Radeon RX 6800M and 6700M graphics solutions for laptops a few weeks ago. The majority of cards will use a dual-slot dual-fan cooler; they will include a single 8-pin PCI-Express graphics connection with a maximum power consumption of 160 watts. The Radeon RX 6600 XT features 2048 rather than 2560 stream processors or shader units and a memory interface decreased from 192 to 128 bits. AMD will initially offer the 6600 XT cards, followed by the 6600. The Radeon RX 6600 XT is to cost a rather extravagant 379 USD as a base reference product. Thus, you can expect board partner cards with custom designs and cooling to sit well above the 400 USD marker. We can already share that the pricing is the biggest culprit of this product series.

   

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AMD Radeon RX 6000 Series
RX 6900 XTRX 6800XTRX 6800RX 6700 XTRX 6600 XTRX 6600
GPU Navi 21 XT(XH) Navi 21 XT Navi 21 XL Navi 22 XT Navi 23 XT Navi 23 XL
Cores 5120 4608 3840 2560 2048 1792
TMUs 320 288 240 160 128 112
ROPs 128 128 96 64 64 64
Infinity Cache 128 MB 128 MB 128 MB 96 MB 32 MB 32 MB
Boost Clock 2250 MHz 2250 MHz 2105 MHz 2581 MHz 2359 MHz -
Memory Clock 16 Gbps 16 Gbps 16 Gbps 16 Gbps 16 Gbps 16 Gbps
Memory 16 GB GDDR6 16 GB GDDR6 16 GB GDDR6 12 GB GDDR6 8 GB GDDR6 8 GB GDDR6
Memory Bus 256-bit 256-bit 256-bit 192-bit 128-bit 128-bit
Bandwidth 512 GB/s 512 GB/s 512 GB/s 384 GB/s 256 GB/s 256 GB/s
TBP 300W 300W 250W 230W 160W -
MSRP 999 USD 649 USD 579 USD 479 USD 379 USD -
Launch Date December 2021 November 2021 November 2021 March 2021 August 2021 August 2021

In this particular review, we'll look at the Gaming X model from MSI. It is MSI's "premium" graphics card in this class, even though it is significantly simpler than a high-end model, therefore it only comes close to living up to its name. The famous Gaming-X cooler, for example, was reduced from three Axial fans to two. Aside from the shorter length, the cooler's design is very similar to that of the larger brother.  Anyway, onwards into the review, then, let's start with photos and a quick architecture overview.

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