The announcement and names of the cards are self-serving and leave little to the imagination: each of the three cards are technically faster, slightly more refined versions of their predecessors, the 6900XT, 6700XT, and 6600XT. On paper, the internal specifications are identical to their predecessors: we’re still looking at the same amount of graphics memory for each respective cards, as well as the same number of Compute Units (CU) and Ray Accelerators (RAs). What sets them apart, however, is their juiced up game clocks and effective memory bandwidth, which is essentially what allows them to clock in higher framerates than both their predecessors and equivalent counterpart. That, along with their slightly more demanding TDP as well. To break it down a little bit, AMD claims that the 6950XT with its 335W TDP, higher game clocks and memory bandwidth offers better performance-per-watt and performance-to-dollar ratios when compared with NVIDIA’s own RTX 3090 Ti. Even if the provided charts seem to show them playing tag with each other. To that end, AMD also shows the performance improvements of each 6x50XT unit once Smart Access Memory and Radeon Super Resolution (RSR) is applied. Pricing for the new AMD Radeon RX 6x50XT starts at US$399 (~RM1749) for the 6650XT, US$549 (~RM2403) for the 6750XT, and US$1099 (~RM4811) for the 6950XT, and they are available starting today. There has been no indication from AMD about making units with its reference designs, meaning that the brand is leaving the distribution of their new RDNA2-powered cards in the hands of its AIB partners.