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For XFX Radeon RX 570, 128 customer reviews collected from 2 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.

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9.11.2019

I realise that many of the problems I experienced here are related to having an older system, but since this is not a top of the range card, I'm going to presume I won't be the only person fitting this into a moderately ancient board. Mine is a Gigabyte H61M-2PV if that means anything to you. Fitting the card was easy. Although I have a 750W power supply so plenty of power to offer, I didn't have the 8 pin cable required, only a 6 pin (nope, not a 6+2, plain 6) so I have to use it with an adaptor. Mine is a 2-SATA to 8-pin, and something to look out for is that it might reduce the power going somewhere else. My PCI USB is now not getting quite enough power to run my EyeX any more,but it will run the Tracker 4C, so no biggie (USB card is powered by a Molex to 2 SATA and I'm using one of those SATAs as my SATA to 8-pin as I didn't have 2 molex to run to the 8pin, so can't really blame it for not having loads of power on this adaptor relay). Something else to bear in mind is that the size of the card slightly fouls the edge of the RAM clip for the second bank, so when my RAM upgrade arrives I will need to pull the card back out again to fit the RAM. It clears the other PCI slot, though, which also worried me. So I installed it all and... nothing. My motherboard turned out to need a BIOS update to support newer cards. That was all very scary because you never upset a working BIOS! Flashed the new BIOS, crash, won't load anything, won't enter BIOS screen. CMOS reset needed, got into the BIOS, shuffled the boot drives back into the correct order, put the old card back in, thank the maker, I see Windows. Swapped back to the 570 - black screen again. Power light on, fans spinning if I leave it running long enough to get warm, no picture. Back to the old card, install Teamviewer with permissions to run before the logon screen. Back to the new card, boot, access the desktop from the laptop using Teamviewer, finally I can see that it's picked up the basic driver it just didn't give me a picture. Worked my way through the driver setup on the incredily small remote screen (several reboots for lost connections), at long last and just 8 hours after I started (!) the card is working. The improved speed and quality over the old one is amazing (then again it was a 5450 so it wants to be) and I'm getting super smooth performance on Cities Skylines on 1080 using the vehicle follow, I was probably getting about 4fps on low before. A few other little glitches, though, I'm getting lots of those "you don't have permission to access this folder" things as everything is locked to "system" and won't release, presume this is due to that popup where Microsoft said my hardward had changed and it had to register again. The error where Windows restarts on shutdown is also back, even though I've already done all the things you are supposed to do to stop it from doing that. At some point I will run a clean install on this machine again and it should clear those gremlins, but it certainly wasn't a case of "open case, add card, boot, install driver, enjoy new card" like it was meant to be. Your mileage may absolutely vary with different machines, and I'm sure there are rigs where you will be up and running flawlessly within 30 minutes, but if you have an older machine, settle in for some pain!Edit to add: I have no comments about the fan noise as I'm deaf, my computer has all the cooling power and I don't care if it sounds like a jet engine.
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27.5.2020

I bought this a replacement as my Sapphire card had reached End-of-Life. I was quite surprised at the performance I got out-of-the-box. Looking at clock speeds of around 1420 - 1425 MHz, this card actually comes as a factory overclocked GPU. The XFX 500 series also comes with a dual bios functionality which means I can choose between performance or quiet (aka Stealth) mode and from my experience I noticed a very minimal difference when I had it in Stealth mode. XFX are doing something right with this card.It comes with two cooling fans and is about 10.7 inches long (watch out for the length if you are using one of those boards that position the CPU too close to the PCIe slots.)You will findnewer and probably better-performing cards on the market now as this one is probably about 2 years old but if you need something to hit the ground running with your gaming and you are on a limited budget, this is your guy.Highly Recommended.
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28.6.2020

I'm no gamer. I'm using this card as the main graphics card, basic desktop activities (think of watching cat videos, and playing minesweeper) driving a 4K monitor. Since my CPU/motherboard did not come with an integrated GPU, I had to go for an external video card.I'm using it with Linux and it is working great. It works out of the box, and has not given me any problem so far. With the integrated Intel video adapter in my previous PC I had occasionally some artefacts on my screen when watching a video full screen on my 4k monitor. This does not happen with this card.The installation is straightforward, plug the card into the PCI slot, attach the monitor and you are ready to go.One plus is that the GPU does not get very hot with my usage profile, and is almost completely silent.
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14.2.2020

Honestly? It's a mixed bag with this one. My overall experience with this card hasn't really been too good, but on the other hand it's also had some very, very good moments. It constantly crashes because the fans refuse to spin up with AMD's driver software, but when this card works? It'll handle 1440p high settings at around 60 frames per second. But, my god, does it get hot. Even with the fans running (when I try for a very long time to get them to work with AMD's notoriously unstable drivers), it averages around 72 degrees celsius under full load. The driver clashes and frequent crashes make this hard to recommend, but the sheer power you get from it makes it a good card if you have ALOT of patience.I'd recommend using Windows 10 and AMD's recommended drivers (19.20).
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2.4.2019

Cooling, cooling, cooling - make sure you got it! If your pc is built with mostly amd components like mine is prepare to be blown out the water cause this card is incredibly good value for money. I got an old am3+ quad core fx 4300, 16gb of ram, Asus m5a78l -m/usb3 motherboard, win 7 64bit and all I can say is that it'll pretty much do anything you throw at it up to 4k with a solid frame rate at 1080p definitely, most titles a few years old at 1440p and like I say everything else at 4k. It's vr ready not that I'll use that feature being half blind but it's there!This card is basically a fireball though so make sure you have adequate airflow around and maybe even think about Northbridge cooling as a simple,cheap and effective performance solution. Enjoy
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19.2.2020

Got this for my son at xmas as it was reduced at the time.It has been performing flawlessly so far in all games he has in 1080p ultra when matched up with a ryzen 7 2700x, B450 Aorus Pro Wifi Mobo & 16GB Corsair Vengeance DDR4 3200.Seeing as he only has a 1080p monitor it has been great bang for buck and no issues with fitting or drivers etc.It hasn't even overheated as yet (usually around 70C when gaming) but it's in a good case with decent airflow.It's also been working perfectly with an Oculus Rift VR set.There may perhaps be games it struggles with such as Red Dead 2 but haven't tested with that game as yet.Its usually around 60fps which is good enough for whats required.

16.1.2019

Installing the board is very simple & the AMD software is straight forward by default, plus plenty of scope for tweaking for those who want it, although there's little overclocking potential.Performance sits about 10% above the RX 580 & in between the GeForce GTX 1060 & GTX 1070, so it offers good value for below £250, but probably not worth the extra if you can find an RX 580 on offer for below £200.The downside is it consumes more power than a GTX 1080 & correspondingly produces a lot of heat (60C is typical). The built in double fans are kept busy on demanding games; it's not a problem unless you are particularly concerned about system noise or your PC already runs warm.

17.4.2020

Got this as a way to not spend too much money to enjoy modern games all without spending more then £100, taking a chance on a second hand card, or needing to use another power plug.This seemed to hit all three - with it drawing its power solely from the PCI-E slot it really helps keep the case tidy and open, and the performance is acceptable for someone who is used to 30fps gaming growing up.The card overclocks well with AMD's Wattman software and seems stable up to a 10% increase on core and 1750Mhz on memory.There's no sound from the cooler, at least none that can be heard over the case fans (which are quiet themselves), and it's not power hungry either.

29.6.2020

there was some worry as a funny smell came out the computer as i started up my first few "DEMANDING" games, this had me worried it was overheating but it was not the case, the fans simply kick in at a certain temp, was simply that "new card smell" it does take a fair amount of power 2x pcie connectors(8 pin), but the smell no longer happens now ive broke the card in with some gaming :D id say this card is basically a steal for its price and would recommend you grab one if your even slightly considering it :Palso the drivers are super easy to get with the radeon auto detect ( you literally google and download it and it just sorts it for you )

26.11.2018

I received one with really really loud coil whine - I might have just been unlucky, however on XFX's website they claim to use low noise inductors which essentially eliminate coil whine, and for this reason I decided to return the card sadly.Bare in mind I used this in mini-ITX where it is much more noticeable - if you're building in a normal size case I'm sure this won't be an issue - the cooling is fantastic on this card, very large and quiet fans, a large aluminium backplate and copper heatpipes all round.I'm only dropping 1 star because I probably just got a bad one - solid card otherwise.

4.8.2019

After watching lots of YouTube vids telling me this card was no good for gaming but faili g to say that's only if you are a perfectionist. This card o bought because the Ryzen 3 2200g is awful on its own. It's easy to fit no power cables required. I played gears 4 at around 55fps at 1080p no problem, Wolfenstein 2 at 60fps at 1080p and almost every game I've played I've had no slow down, few frame drops. Just did dead rising 4 in 1080p not one issue. As for online you would probably need a 570-580 but for single player games it's spot on.

8.5.2019

The RX 590 seems to be a decent card so far in the 90 days I have owned it, I have experienced no faults, and it will run most titles at 70 FPS on Ultra settings at 1080p.I haven't found it to overheat, but the only downside is that it consumes electricity like the clappers.My PC Spec:- Corsair TX750M Modular Power Supply Unit.- Intel i3 8100 6MB Cache running at 3.60 GHz- 8GB Corsair DDR4 Vengence (2400 MHz)- ASRock H310M Motherboard- 240GB Kingston SSDAll in all, this is an excellent card for a casual gamer like me.

5.10.2019

Not the most powerful card but if you are looking for this you should already know that, I can play modern games at high settings at 1080p no problem. Games such as just cause as an example run 1080p on high settings at 60fps no problem. Great card. However the card can run very hot as it will always be at full load gaming so I would recommend maybe not playing more that 5 hours at a time as performance may decrease and if you play that long anyway, you should look at getting a better card as this is kind of casual so to speak.

27.3.2020

Bought this 2019 May 3rd for £215. I have used it almost every day for 11 months and it still performing just as well.Paired with ryzen 5 2600 (OC to 4.1 GHz). Currently playing Destiny 2 on 1080p everything 100-110fps. Most definitely capable of playing on highest settings with around 60fps.Can get loud when fans starts heading upwards of 60%. Though this does not bother me, it may for others.The price should be around £165 now. For the performance you get, this card is one of the best cards for its price to performance.

1.3.2019

I am very surprised how much this card has shot up in price (396 upon reviewing) i bought this for 250 about half a year ago. Other than that this card is brilliant for 1080p 144hz gaming. Paired with a Ryzen 1600X all modern games settings are a mix between medium and high settings or higher. (90-130 FPS with high and 50-80 FPS with ultra). Any game before 2016 is maxed settings with 80-150fps. It is not a solid 140+ fps card but if you sacrifice some graphics settings it can be.

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