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This Sapphire RX 9070 XT is cheaper from Overclockers than it was for Prime Day

RTX 5070 Ti performance at a steep discount.

sapphire pulse rx 9070 xt
Image credit: Sapphire/Digital Foundry

The Radeon RX 9070 XT 16GB is AMD's best value graphics card for 1440p gaming, but they've been extremely expensive since they debuted this spring. Now, one option has kept falling in price further towards the £500 mark since its release, which is a more than fair price for performance between Nvidia's RTX 5070 Ti and RTX 5080 cards. Best of all, this particular card is made by Sapphire, our favourite AMD board partner, and it marks Overclockers' cheapest 9070 XT model yet.

This deal is actually only available until 2pm today according to the Overclockers forum and sticks around as a remnant of the Prime Day bonanza from yesterday, so you may want to run, not walk, towards this card at £555.

Sapphire PULSE AMD RADEON™ RX 9070 XT GAMING 16GB DUAL HDMI/DUAL DP

Sapphire Pulse RX 9070 XT

Now £555.00 (was £659.99)

See at Overclockers UK

In the Digital Foundry review at the time, Rich noted how the 9070 XT has offered a real leap in performance against the previous generation. Its numbers put it ahead of some of AMD's top-class predecessors - the RX 7900 XT and flagship RX 7900 XTX - in some instances, which is excellent for a more moderately-priced card. This comes alongside being much more capable in ray-tracing - an area where AMD has traditionally struggled.

To run through some numbers - in Alan Wake 2 at 1440p - the 9070 XT achieved 40fps in a seriously demanding title that put it eight percent faster than AMD's RX 7900 XTX, and even 12 percent brisker than Nvidia's similarly-priced RTX 5070. It gets even more impressive in Cyberpunk 2077 - a game that's traditionally been an Nvidia playground by this point. Here, the RX 9070 XT yielded a 51fps average at 1440p, putting it a full eight percent quicker than the 5070, and even 24 percent ahead of the RX 7900 XTX.

The 9070 XT yields a strong generational uplift against the 7900 XT in games without ray-tracing enabled, and pushes even higher against Nvidia's choices. For instance, in F1 24, the 173fps at 1440p puts it on par with the 7900 XT while miraculously also being just three percent behind the RTX 5080, and 14 percent ahead of the RTX 5070 Ti. Forza Horizon 5 sees the 5070 Ti peg back a little, taking a small 2fps lead over the 9070 XT, although it’s worth remembering the £150 price differential between the two cards with this deal in mind.

You also get the powers of AMD's FSR4 upscaler, which is a much more potent performer than the older FSR3 in our testing with it able to extract more detail in focused areas, such as on clothing and particle effects. It comes with a small performance overhead against FSR3, hence the slightly lower frame rates, but is nonetheless well worth enabling in supported titles.

For the £555 asking price, the 9070 XT still represents solid value for a capable GPU for 1440p and even 4K workloads. We haven't seen these cards stay available at this price for long, so it's worth taking a look if you're in the market for a graphics card upgrade.