The NVIDIA RTX 3070 is a strong 1440p card and the AMD RX 7600 is a mainstream 1080p card. Across popular games at 1080p with FrameCoach's optimized settings, the NVIDIA RTX 3070 averages about NaN FPS versus NaN FPS for the AMD RX 7600 — roughly 45% more performance.
| NVIDIA RTX 3070 | AMD RX 7600 | |
|---|---|---|
| Relative performance | 145% | 100% (baseline) |
| VRAM | 8GB | 8GB |
| Ray tracing | Yes | Yes |
| Upscaling | DLSS | FSR |
| Tier | strong 1440p | mainstream 1080p |
| Avg FPS @ 1080p | NaN FPS | NaN FPS |
Estimated frame rates with optimized balanced settings, both cards on a AMD Ryzen 9 5950X-class CPU.
| Game | NVIDIA RTX 3070 | AMD RX 7600 |
|---|
For most gamers, the NVIDIA RTX 3070 is the better performer of the two — about 45% faster, which translates to a clearly smoother experience in demanding games. If you're upgrading from the AMD RX 7600, the NVIDIA RTX 3070 is a sensible step up.
⚡ Tune either GPU for your exact CPU & target FPS in the optimizer →
Yes. The NVIDIA RTX 3070 is about 45% faster overall, averaging roughly NaN FPS versus NaN FPS for the AMD RX 7600 at 1080p with optimized settings across popular games.
About 45% faster on average. The exact gap varies by game and resolution — heavier, GPU-bound games show the biggest difference.
A 45% jump is a meaningful upgrade worth considering.
FPS figures are estimates from a generalized model (hardware tier × game load × per-setting weights), not live benchmarks — real performance varies by scene, drivers and game version.