![]() ![]() Our test bench system consists of a Core i7-8700K built inside the Corsair Crystal 570X packing 16GB of DDR4-3400 memory. For comparison we have nine other graphics cards including high-end models such as Vega 64 and the RTX 2070. Little did we know, GPU prices were going mad shortly thereafter.įor today's test we have a dozen modern games and we're going to see how well two RX 590s compare to individual cards in 1080p and 1440p. So we tested two GTX 1080s in SLI and later in 2016 we coupled two Titan X cards, which we called the ludicrous graphics test because the cost of the graphics cards alone was upwards of $2,400. After that we found less reasons to do a comparison and we went in the pursuit of achieving playable frame rates at 4K. The Fury X cards came out on top by a small 4% margin across the 10 games tested at 4K. The last time we ran a multi-GPU comparison at TechSpot was back in 2015 when we tested a GeForce GTX 980 Ti SLI configuration against Radeon R9 Fury X Crossfire. But recently two RX 590 cards came our way and we thought, why not? On our end, we've been stubborn about it and for the past year we have basically refused to check it out. It's even more surprising given AMD, and in particular Nvidia, have made no secret about the fact that they are pulling back on multi-GPU technology. Despite flatout telling readers not to invest in either technology for years now, there still seems to be quite a lot of interest. It always surprises us how often we get requests for Crossfire and SLI benchmarks. ![]()
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