AMD’s Navi seems to be off on a good start. The new architecture is not only performing better than competing solutions but is also better priced and thus offering better value for money in the Indian market. Having proven itself to be competitive, we should start to see more gamers picking up the RX cards for mid-range configurations unless NVIDIA responds with price cuts on their RTX 20-series and RTX Super cards. As AMD inches towards the top of the stack, we are excitedly waiting to see how the GPU landscape evolves over the coming year. AMD’s 7nm+ cards, Intel’s new discrete GPUs and NVIDIA’s Turing-refresh are all slated to be launched in 2020. The AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT and RX 5700 with their new RDNA architecture are poised to carve a good share of the GPU market for now.
Mithun Mohandas is an Indian technology journalist with 10 years of experience covering consumer technology. He is currently employed at Digit in the capacity of a Managing Editor. Mithun has a background in Computer Engineering and was an active member of the IEEE during his college days. He has a penchant for digging deep into unravelling what makes a device tick. If there's a transistor in it, Mithun's probably going to rip it apart till he finds it. At Digit, he covers processors, graphics cards, storage media, displays and networking devices aside from anything developer related. As an avid PC gamer, he prefers RTS and FPS titles, and can be quite competitive in a race to the finish line. He only gets consoles for the exclusives. He can be seen playing Valorant, World of Tanks, HITMAN and the occasional Age of Empires or being the voice behind hundreds of Digit videos. View Full Profile
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