Scorpio offical reveal incoming, along with 4K Forza, RDR2 and Battlefront.


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22 minutes ago, George P said:

It depends on the GPU makers and if they want to add DX12 directly into their GPUs, but I have a feeling the answer is no.

 

This isn't like going from DX11 to DX12, which was a software side, API change.  This is taking D3D12 from software and sticking it into the GPU directly.  It's a very custom job specific to the xbox.

The quote is CPU related not GPU.  If it is indeed a hardware change it's even less likely AMD will add it to PC CPUs and even if they did that PC game developers would use if if the far higher selling Intel CPUs didn't likewise have it.  I still suspect it's marketing spin for the reduction of draw calls going from DX11 to DX12 though.

7 minutes ago, Asmodai said:

The quote is CPU related not GPU.  If it is indeed a hardware change it's even less likely AMD will add it to PC CPUs and even if they did that PC game developers would use if if the far higher selling Intel CPUs didn't likewise have it.  I still suspect it's marketing spin for the reduction of draw calls going from DX11 to DX12 though.

It's a GPU change the engineers have made that takes over CPU calculations, so you free up the CPU even more. 

 

Just noticed the 16XAF filtering applies to 360 games as well, considering you missed that generation your going to be playing these games in the best possible way now.

54 minutes ago, Asmodai said:

The quote is CPU related not GPU.  If it is indeed a hardware change it's even less likely AMD will add it to PC CPUs and even if they did that PC game developers would use if if the far higher selling Intel CPUs didn't likewise have it.  I still suspect it's marketing spin for the reduction of draw calls going from DX11 to DX12 though.

Yeah, they added the needed instructions into the GPU directly so that the CPU now doesn't need to make such detailed instructions for the GPU, what would take thousands of draw calls from the CPU to the GPU to render a scene is now cut down to 11 because the GPU doesn't need to CPU to translate all the dx12 stuff for it since it knows it now.   This is why I said they've basically added DX12 right into the GPU itself.

 

It's a big custom job that I doubt anyone at amd or NVidia will like to add to their PC line of video cards, which is a shame because this is a big piece of optimization.  This is also why the scorpio can do native 4k games with just 6tflops while on the PC we have to brute force things with raw power and little optimization since everything is more general.  

  • Like 2
Quote

Did you see it running a game?

Yes. Well, a ForzaTech demo, which is a stress test based on the Forza Motorsport 6 engine, running the maximum number of cars around a track with dynamic weather and all the bells and whistles turned on.

link

 

Not sure how I missed this about running Dynamic weather as well, even looking at the picture now the sky looks like FH3, same as the wet weather on the track.

 

FM7 will be a beast. 500+ cars, Dynamic weather, actual damage, Native 4K. 

21 hours ago, BajiRav said:

Not much actually, just add an entire PS4 to PS4 Pro and you've Scorpio.

 

Not much more powerful, you're right. Just 50% more memory, 22% more GPU clock, UDH BluRay drive etc. etc.

 

im not the brightest... but some of the breakdown i actually got and am quite impressed.

 

they basically took the jaguar chip broke it down and rebuilt it with better tech. impressive

5 hours ago, Showan said:

they basically took the jaguar chip broke it down and rebuilt it with better tech. impressive

You mean a die shrink?  They did that with the One S too.  It's pretty standard for consoles to have die shrinks (be "rebuilt with better tech" over the life of a console).  For example the PS3 CPU went from 90nm to 60nm to 45nm over it's life.  What's different this time around is when they did that before they were careful to keep the frequency the same for compability purposes despite the smaller revisions being capable of running at higher clocks.  The Jaguar chip in Project Scorpio is clocked 31% higher than the launch Xbox One and has 31% higher performance which means they made no major hardware modifications to it other than shrinking it and raising the clock.  They did also have to tweak it to support the GDDR5 unified memory and such but those are things Jaguar was already tweaked for by AMD for the PS4.  I'm not saying MS doesn't have some extra little tweaks here and there but it's not any sort of radical redesign of Jaguar.  What happened with the GPU and memory subsystem are far more impressive.

Well, we've got the technical specs and they're really good, now we need to see what it'll look like and what it'll cost.  I see posts here and there saying it'll be over $500, I doubt it.    They've said this is still a consumer targeting device and has to have a price point for them, so all this talk about $600 or w/e is off the mark.   I think it'll be $499 with the 1TB hdd, maybe $549 with a 2TB hdd if they want to, but we're talking 7 months from now, probably a November release, and most of this tech has been in the works for months already so costs have been cut as well.   For example, the CPU has shrunk, the GPU while it's more beefy it's also on a 16nm die compared to the older 28nm, so its cheaper.   We've got more and faster RAM so that does up the costs from that side but the audio/video block for example, it's the same exact thing already in the XB1S, not something new.

 

the UHD BD drive is the same from what I've read, so no new costs there also.   I'm thinking $499 is possible even with all this work and power, heck, take a hit and charge $399 and make it up on games like crackdown 3 and so on.

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7 minutes ago, George P said:

Well, we've got the technical specs and they're really good, now we need to see what it'll look like and what it'll cost.  I see posts here and there saying it'll be over $500, I doubt it.    They've said this is still a consumer targeting device and has to have a price point for them, so all this talk about $600 or w/e is off the mark.   I think it'll be $499 with the 1TB hdd, maybe $549 with a 2TB hdd if they want to, but we're talking 7 months from now, probably a November release, and most of this tech has been in the works for months already so costs have been cut as well.   For example, the CPU has shrunk, the GPU while it's more beefy it's also on a 16nm die compared to the older 28nm, so its cheaper.   We've got more and faster RAM so that does up the costs from that side but the audio/video block for example, it's the same exact thing already in the XB1S, not something new.

 

the UHD BD drive is the same from what I've read, so no new costs there also.   I'm thinking $499 is possible even with all this work and power, heck, take a hit and charge $399 and make it up on games like crackdown 3 and so on.

im thinking along the same lines $499 on release and a drop to $399 in Q1 2018

  • Like 1
20 hours ago, Showan said:

 

im not the brightest... but some of the breakdown i actually got and am quite impressed.

 

they basically took the jaguar chip broke it down and rebuilt it with better tech. impressive

yep in NV talk they "Ti" d it :)

3 minutes ago, Mando said:

im thinking along the same lines $499 on release and a drop to $399 in Q1 2018

Yeah, $499 is a good place to start when you think of all you get in the box to start.  The OG XB1 going for $499 back then wasn't smart at all because it was going directly against the PS4 at $399 and it was the weaker of the two systems.  The scorpio can cost more than the PS4 Pro to start because we're talking about a more powerful and newer system, specially if they can release a number of games to release with it that showcase the extra abilities.  Like FM7 and crackdown 3, etc, need more games to boost things, it'll be interesting to see how it goes for sure and MS needs to push out more content.

  • Like 1
5 minutes ago, George P said:

Yeah, $499 is a good place to start when you think of all you get in the box to start.  The OG XB1 going for $499 back then wasn't smart at all because it was going directly against the PS4 at $399 and it was the weaker of the two systems.  The scorpio can cost more than the PS4 Pro to start because we're talking about a more powerful and newer system, specially if they can release a number of games to release with it that showcase the extra abilities.  Like FM7 and crackdown 3, etc, need more games to boost things, it'll be interesting to see how it goes for sure and MS needs to push out more content.

we also should factor in the ease of porting DX12 titles from PC arena to the scorpio, heck if MS were REALLY smart, theyd open it up to Valve also and have its steam platform...but that wont happen. They also need to push the media center idea more also, youve got a top notch 4K bluray player/media consumption set top unit there throw in.

 

id consider another xbox when the pay once play on any supported MS platform becomes the norm. 

  • Like 1
18 hours ago, Mando said:

id consider another xbox when the pay once play on any supported MS platform becomes the norm. 

Would say we're already there, for any first party titles anyway. Every Microsoft published title or xbox exclusive gets PC as well for free if you go digital. 360 titles backwards compatible for free, constantly moving more titles in. The amount of engineering this would of taken we can we'll assume they'll continue to work with every future xbox as well due to 'no more generations' everything tied to your Live account will also continue to work on future consoles I would put money on. The backlash over Sony and Nintendos online stores constantly price gauging every generation and Microsoft  continuing  to listen to the players after the disastrous launch.  

 

The only thing we're missing now is OG Xbox support and it had one of the largest original title line ups for a console ever that I would love to play through again, and I'm betting even the xbox one let alone the Scorpio has enough power just for software emulation alone. Not needing to download the titles like 360 and port them over or worry about licencing. Spencer said never say never, but wants as many 360 games ported as possible first and that's their main goal. But I would truly be surprised if they didn't have people already working on emulation.

 

Being able to continually play every xbox game ever, on every new console launch going forwards? That's doing it right. 

 

Money on $499US. Probably around $650-$700 Australian. Will preorder the moment its available.

The play anywhere stuff is nice but some say it's hurting hardware sales because why get an xbox if you can play on the PC?  Of course lots of 3rd party PS4 "exclusives" are also on the PC more and more now, like the new Nier for example.   So it's really down to the 1st party stuff and MS needs more 1st party exclusives.  I don't get why they killed scalebound for example.

 

So while I like the play anywhere stuff I think MS needs to maybe bring things to the xbox first and then to the PC as play anywhere, maybe like 1 or 2 weeks on the xbox to start and then bring it to the PC.

4 hours ago, George P said:

The play anywhere stuff is nice but some say it's hurting hardware sales because why get an xbox if you can play on the PC?  Of course lots of 3rd party PS4 "exclusives" are also on the PC more and more now, like the new Nier for example.   So it's really down to the 1st party stuff and MS needs more 1st party exclusives.  I don't get why they killed scalebound for example.

 

So while I like the play anywhere stuff I think MS needs to maybe bring things to the xbox first and then to the PC as play anywhere, maybe like 1 or 2 weeks on the xbox to start and then bring it to the PC.

I don't think they care where they sell the game as long as they get you into that windows 10 & live environment since Microsoft is a lot larger than it's xbox division which would have to be one of the smallest parts. I don't think there's that many console gamers who decided to play on PC instead, people who are that into PC gaming usually where never going to buy a console anyway. I have a more than competent PC but PC gaming does nothing for me compared to when I was 16. Now it's all about popping that disc in, instant working, laying on a comfortable couch, big screen TV and talking to the those normal real life friends who only console game.

 

I can only assume they cancelled it for a good reason.. After sinking so much money that they wouldn't want to just write off. Development hell, not delivering? Guess we'll never know now.

 

Sony has had a smashing of first party games this year making the xbox look quite worse exclusive wise for the last 6 months, we do get SoD2, Sea of Thieves, Crackdown and Forza at the end of the year all which I've been looking forward to all for years, but new first party exclusives? I'm 100% behind you and expect some announcements at E3 since they've changed everything else people have complained about since launch it's the only thing left that people are bitching about at the moment. Here's hoping anyway..

1 hour ago, Vandalsquad said:

I don't think they care where they sell the game as long as they get you into that windows 10 & live environment since Microsoft is a lot larger than it's xbox division which would have to be one of the smallest parts. I don't think there's that many console gamers who decided to play on PC instead, people who are that into PC gaming usually where never going to buy a console anyway. I have a more than competent PC but PC gaming does nothing for me compared to when I was 16. Now it's all about popping that disc in, instant working, laying on a comfortable couch, big screen TV and talking to the those normal real life friends who only console game.

 

I can only assume they cancelled it for a good reason.. After sinking so much money that they wouldn't want to just write off. Development hell, not delivering? Guess we'll never know now.

 

Sony has had a smashing of first party games this year making the xbox look quite worse exclusive wise for the last 6 months, we do get SoD2, Sea of Thieves, Crackdown and Forza at the end of the year all which I've been looking forward to all for years, but new first party exclusives? I'm 100% behind you and expect some announcements at E3 since they've changed everything else people have complained about since launch it's the only thing left that people are bitching about at the moment. Here's hoping anyway..

Yeah, really need to push into more 1st party and 2nd party (MS published and paid for but made by another developer) and get those out quick.   It's the only way to push things ahead, just doing a new Forza and a new Halo and a new Gears isn't enough now.  Hell, just go out and pay and get some 2nd party exclusives and so on.

  • Like 1
12 hours ago, George P said:

Yeah, really need to push into more 1st party and 2nd party (MS published and paid for but made by another developer) and get those out quick.   It's the only way to push things ahead, just doing a new Forza and a new Halo and a new Gears isn't enough now.  Hell, just go out and pay and get some 2nd party exclusives and so on.

The crying of Playstation fans like Tomb Raider all over again :laugh: No I would love to see them go use some of Microsofts war chest and buy up more exclusives and say go for it. Some more info on Forza, Scorpio will pretty much be running the game at 1070 equivalent.  

 

 

On ‎4‎/‎7‎/‎2017 at 2:21 PM, Asmodai said:

You mean a die shrink?  They did that with the One S too.  It's pretty standard for consoles to have die shrinks (be "rebuilt with better tech" over the life of a console).  For example the PS3 CPU went from 90nm to 60nm to 45nm over it's life.  What's different this time around is when they did that before they were careful to keep the frequency the same for compability purposes despite the smaller revisions being capable of running at higher clocks.  The Jaguar chip in Project Scorpio is clocked 31% higher than the launch Xbox One and has 31% higher performance which means they made no major hardware modifications to it other than shrinking it and raising the clock.  They did also have to tweak it to support the GDDR5 unified memory and such but those are things Jaguar was already tweaked for by AMD for the PS4.  I'm not saying MS doesn't have some extra little tweaks here and there but it's not any sort of radical redesign of Jaguar.  What happened with the GPU and memory subsystem are far more impressive.

I also meant better tech from a software perspective a well.

to re-write and move some of the instruction sets to make life easier for the architecture as a whole overall is fascinating...

5 hours ago, Vandalsquad said:

The crying of Playstation fans like Tomb Raider all over again :laugh: No I would love to see them go use some of Microsofts war chest and buy up more exclusives and say go for it. Some more info on Forza, Scorpio will pretty much be running the game at 1070 equivalent.  

 

 

Yeah, why not?  Nothing Sony isn't doing already, only fair IMO.  

  • Like 1
On 4/6/2017 at 0:44 PM, George P said:

Yeah, they added the needed instructions into the GPU directly so that the CPU now doesn't need to make such detailed instructions for the GPU, what would take thousands of draw calls from the CPU to the GPU to render a scene is now cut down to 11 because the GPU doesn't need to CPU to translate all the dx12 stuff for it since it knows it now.   This is why I said they've basically added DX12 right into the GPU itself.

 

It's a big custom job that I doubt anyone at amd or NVidia will like to add to their PC line of video cards, which is a shame because this is a big piece of optimization.  This is also why the scorpio can do native 4k games with just 6tflops while on the PC we have to brute force things with raw power and little optimization since everything is more general.  

I'm still not convinced they made any significant hardware changes.  I can't look up the exact quote because work (where I tend to look at these forums while I wait for compiles and such) blocks eurogamer but Digital Foundry has updated their article to say that even the original Xbox One will get this new command buffer modification which makes it sound more like a software/firmware change than anything else.

On 4/9/2017 at 4:25 AM, George P said:

The play anywhere stuff is nice but some say it's hurting hardware sales because why get an xbox if you can play on the PC?  Of course lots of 3rd party PS4 "exclusives" are also on the PC more and more now, like the new Nier for example.   So it's really down to the 1st party stuff and MS needs more 1st party exclusives.  I don't get why they killed scalebound for example.

 

So while I like the play anywhere stuff I think MS needs to maybe bring things to the xbox first and then to the PC as play anywhere, maybe like 1 or 2 weeks on the xbox to start and then bring it to the PC.

I've heard that argument as well but I don't buy it.  Most people, for whatever reason, don't want to hook a full PC to their TV in their living room.  In a rare case I'm actually with the majority on that particular point.  I have a gaming PC in my "Office" but I like to buy consoles for my living room TV.  I think Play Anywhere is awesome because of that because it means I can buy the game once and play it in my office or my living room.  I think consoles also just work better for things like Sports games, fighting games, party games like Rock Band, etc.  I'm a PlayStation guy generally speaking and I have a decent gaming PC (i7 with RX480 and 16GB RAM) and plan to build a new 4k PC late this year or sometime next but I'm still excited about Project Scorpio for the living room.

On ‎4‎/‎8‎/‎2017 at 5:05 AM, George P said:

Well, we've got the technical specs and they're really good, now we need to see what it'll look like and what it'll cost.  I see posts here and there saying it'll be over $500, I doubt it.    They've said this is still a consumer targeting device and has to have a price point for them, so all this talk about $600 or w/e is off the mark.   I think it'll be $499 with the 1TB hdd, maybe $549 with a 2TB hdd if they want to, but we're talking 7 months from now, probably a November release, and most of this tech has been in the works for months already so costs have been cut as well.   For example, the CPU has shrunk, the GPU while it's more beefy it's also on a 16nm die compared to the older 28nm, so its cheaper.   We've got more and faster RAM so that does up the costs from that side but the audio/video block for example, it's the same exact thing already in the XB1S, not something new.

 

the UHD BD drive is the same from what I've read, so no new costs there also.   I'm thinking $499 is possible even with all this work and power, heck, take a hit and charge $399 and make it up on games like crackdown 3 and so on.

They'll be going with $399, anything more will be stupid IMO and I don't think hardware is any costlier than PS4 (in launch window). I'd even say $399 launch in summer and $349 + game for holidays. They'd probably take a hit during holidays if this is really Microsoft of the olden days.

Some more scorpio info out of DF today, the system will come with HDMI 2.1 and support AMDs freesync technology.

 

source

 

  • Like 2
11 hours ago, George P said:

Some more scorpio info out of DF today, the system will come with HDMI 2.1 and support AMDs freesync technology.

 

source

 

Bloody impressive... Throws a spanner in the works but was planning on buying a new 75"+ with the excuse of needing it with the misses when our new place is ready. This won't be any TV's yet when I'm looking at picking one up :( Good to see them future proofing the hell out of it but.

I just got a new 55" 4k HDR LG tv yesterday, sure it doesn't have support for this but I figure most games will aim for 4k at some fixed framerate, be it 60 or 30 depending on the game.

4 hours ago, George P said:

I just got a new 55" 4k HDR LG tv yesterday, sure it doesn't have support for this but I figure most games will aim for 4k at some fixed framerate, be it 60 or 30 depending on the game.

I don't think any current TV supports Freesync nor do I think they likely will in the future.  It's neat to have in there and you can use it if you hook your Xbox to a monitor but major televisions aren't designed to support video games and freesync has no value in normal video content.

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The new development has accelerated the timeline to achieve practical quantum computing from 2035 to 2029. Sony gaming accessories: Sony finally attached a release date to a few of its gaming accessories, including FlexStrike Wireless Fight Stick and 27” Gaming Monitor with DualSense Charging Hook. Both are releasing in August this year. Leaky Surface: Some leaked promo material of the upcoming Surface Pro hints at what the device could offer. The tablet will be powered by a 12-core Snapdragon X2 Elite processor paired with a new Neural Processing Unit operating at up to 80 TOPS. This week in Google News Catch up on some of the latest Google news updates that arrived throughout the week: How to train your AI? An AI model is as good as the data it's trained on. Google is reportedly reaching out to Android developers to get their private codebases to train models and improve development tools, while giving them some cash in return. Design your band: Google published the physical design blueprints for the Fitbit Air, opening doors for anyone with the required skills to customize the screenless tracker and build accessories. The search giant said that certified accessories can also get the official "Made for Google" badge. It's optional now: The UK's competition watchdog has enabled publishers to opt out of Google's generative AI search features, such as AI Overviews and AI Mode. It's also forcing Google to attribute content properly, using clear links to sources, in all AI-generated answers. This week in Apple News Catch up on some of the latest Apple news updates that arrived throughout the week: What to expect? WWDC 2026 is just around the corner. Alongside refinements to Liquid Glass, the iOS 27 update could be centered on the long-awaited upgrade to Siri. iPadOS 27 is also expected to get a major AI boost this year, among various expected updates. Apple smart glasses: If you're hoping to see Apple's new smart glasses at WWDC, you might have to wait. Those plans are reportedly delayed until late 2027. It's said Apple is cautious about launching hardware that relies on underdeveloped visual intelligence systems. Keep in check: A recent court ruling that lifted an injunction on the Texas Age Assurance Law (SB 2420), Apple had to enforce strict age-verification and parental-consent rules for new Apple accounts created in Texas. This week in AI news Catch up on the latest artificial intelligence news updates that arrived throughout the week: OpenAI faces lawsuit: Florida Republican Attorney General James Uthmeier took OpenAI to court, claiming that the AI lab released an unsafe product and misled the public about safety risks associated with ChatGPT. France gets cash for AI: SoftBank plans to invest up to €75 billion ($87 billion) in France's AI infrastructure, making it one of the largest investments in Europe's AI sector. Up to €45 billion will be used to build two AI data centers in Le Bosquel and Dunkirk. AI chaos slows down: After weeks of AI-generated noise and late submissions, Linus Torvalds said that things have quietened down for Linux 7.1 RC6, which is smaller than RC5, and we could be on track for a normal release cycle. ChatGPT memory upgrade: The AI chatbot got a major architectural upgrade to its memory system, significantly improving its long-term context retention. It improved factual recall from 67.9% in 2025 to 82.8% in 2026, and accuracy over time improved from 52.2% to 75.1%. Lockdown Mode expanded: OpenAI is rolling out ChatGPT's Lockdown Mode to all personal and self-serve ChatGPT Business accounts. The feature improves security by disabling live web browsing, Deep Research, Agent Mode, and more. Codex on ChatGPT: The full Codex experience is now available in the ChatGPT app to support knowledge workers, who represent about 20% of Codex users. A new Codex feature called Sites enables users to create and share interactive hosted websites and apps. This week in Microsoft News You can download the Surface Laptop Ultra wallpapers in high resolution. Windows 11 is dominating the gaming market, and data from Steam showed nearly 70% of all participants were using a Windows 11 PC. A third-party tool called OfflineInsiderEnroll is for insiders who want to unlock Windows 11 features with a Microsoft account. You can check out Taras's freshly baked Microsoft Weekly roundup to catch up on all the interesting stories this week. This week in science news Image by Drew Rae via Pexels Catch up on some of the latest science and out-of-this-world updates that arrived throughout the week: How will the Sun end? Astronomers found that an ancient white dwarf star is still consuming rocky planetary debris after cooling for three billion years, proving systems remain active long after their host star dies. Eye of Sauron: Scientists solved a cosmic mystery. A distant black hole is pointing its intense jet straight at Earth, creating an optical illusion that makes the blindingly bright stream look surprisingly low. This week in gaming news Catch up on some of the latest gaming and virtual world updates that arrived throughout the week: Summer Game Fest: The event went live on June 5 from the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, California. The two-hour showcase was hosted by video game journalist Geoff Keighley and introduced games across multiple genres. New racing game: Some former Forza Horizon team members created a brand-new racing game called Clutch. The game offers a story-driven campaign, multiplayer action, and aims to be a "benchmark in car customization." FSR hits a new milestone: AMD announced that the latest generation of its FSR technology now officially supports 300 games, a considerable jump from just 30 at launch. What else in gaming? The latest issue of Pulasthi's Weekend PC Game Deals curates several exciting games on sale this week. The final leg of the Epic Games Store's mystery giveaways brings copies of Rogue Waters and Songs of Conquest to claim for PC gamers. Xbox Free Play Days welcomed ten new games this weekend from a single publisher, including Little Rocket Lab, Spirittea, Descenders Next, and Let's Build a Zoo. Meanwhile, Prime members can grab Mafia III, Tomb Raider remasters, and 13 more games in June to keep. That said, here are some more stories from the gaming world: Crystal Dynamics pushes Tomb Raider remake to 2027 A roguelike and a 4X strategy game are free to claim on the Epic Games Store Looks like EA's Star Wars Zero Company will be out this August God of War Laufey announced, introducing Kratos' wife as new protagonist From the review corner If you have been thinking about capturing the night sky, the DWARF mini is the world's smallest smart telescope for night-and-day sky captures, which Steven reviewed this week. For an amateur astronomer spending $399, the telescope offers premium build quality, automated tracking, and a low learning curve. However, the tracking may not always work straight away, and the connection can be finicky. GEEKOM Air12 2026 Edition It's a small mini PC from GEEKOM fitted with an Intel Tiger Lake Pentium Gold 7505, up to 16GB of RAM, and up to a 512GB SSD. GEEKOM Air12 2026 Edition comes with a lightweight chassis, a 15W TDP, supports up to three 4K 60Hz displays, and Type-C on the front. However, points are deducted for its single-rank (2666 MHz) DDR4 RAM, and the front USB port is data-only. AMD RX 9070 GRE Steven and Sayan joined their forces to put the new AMD RX 9070 GRE against the RX 9070, RX 9070 XT, NVIDIA 5070 FE, and some other cards in gaming as well as productivity. AMD has pitched it against the Nvidia RTX 5060 Ti 16GB, which is typically sold at around this price range. The GRE performed quite well against both the 7800 XT and the 4070. It offers balanced performance, sufficient VRAM, and runs cool. However, the ray tracing might feel mediocre. Cuktech 10 Ultra How about a wall charger with a big screen that shows the stats in real time? Taras reviewed the Cuktech 10 Ultra charger, which features four ports, a large display, and up to 110W of power output. Its 1.57-inch display with 700 nits max brightness is the main highlight, capable of showing total output power, current temperature, power distribution across ports, and more. 007 First Light Pulasthi's review of 007 First Light said the game delivers an immersive, globe-trotting origin story for James Bond, packed inside a tightly choreographed action game. It features over-the-top action sequences, Bond's right amount of overconfidence, and satisfying gunplay. On the other hand, stealth can be too predictable, enemy AI is not very bright, and the missing FOV slider is a pain. More price drops! We got you covered with some hot tech deals all week. For some reason, if you missed out on a great discount, here is a summary of some recent deals that are still alive: Samsung 990 PRO SSD 2TB NVMe - $389.99 (39% off) Sonos Sub 4 - Wireless Subwoofer - $759 (16% off) Logitech MX Creative Console - $159.99 (20% off) To view all of our recent deals, click here. So, these were some of the biggest tech news and other updates from this week. There will be more issues of our 7 Days series in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing to extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Have a great weekend!
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