The card measures 235 mm long making it reasonably compact, though it does stand 115 mm tall and is rather wide at 50 mm. Overall, sleek looks with no RGB lighting. The only visible plastic besides the fans are the triangular cut out bits found on the end and side of the card, they look neat. There's another aluminum cover on the front side which gives the fan shroud a premium look and feel. But color choice aside, it's a nice looking card with an aluminum backplate that wraps around the side of the card. We'll go over the basics as usual with a focus on the card's design, we'll briefly look at performance which shouldn't be anything too different than what we saw before from the same GPU, before diving into operating temperatures, power consumption and overclocking.ĭesign-wise. Today we are reviewing the MSI RX 5700 XT Evoke OC. So far so good, and now we have our first custom partner cards making it to retail. That was a launch day review, and thus we speculated that availability would be key, and thankfully in the past few weeks we've seen AMD and partner makers stocking shelves with reference $400 5700 XT's and $350 5700's. Not to mention the 5700 XT gets you near GeForce 2070 Super performance at a hefty discount. When we reviewed the new Radeon RX 5700 XT GPU about a month ago we found it in a sweet spot at $400, delivering better value than more affordable products such as the original RTX 2060 and the GTX 1660 Ti.
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