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XFX

XFX Swift AMD Radeon RX 9070 OC White Triple Fan Gaming Edition with 16GB GDDR6 HDMI 3xDP, AMD RDNA 4 RX-97SWFB3W9

  • Based on 9,190 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: Only 9 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Thursday, Jul 10
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Style: RX 9070 SWFT White


Features

  • Chipset: AMD RX 9070
  • Memory: 16 GB GDDR6
  • XFX SWFT White Triple Fan Cooling Solution
  • Boost Clock Up to 2700 MHz

Description

The XFX AMD Radeon RX 9070 Series

Graphics Coprocessor: AMD RX 9070


Brand: XFX


Graphics Ram Size: 16 GB


GPU Clock Speed: 1440 GHz


Video Output Interface: HDMI / DISPLAY PORT


Max Screen Resolution: ‎3840x2160


Memory Speed: ‎20 GHz


Graphics Coprocessor: ‎AMD RX 9070


Chipset Brand: ‎AMD


Card Description: ‎AMD Radeon RX 9070 with 16GB GDDR6, Boost Clock 2700 MHz, Base Clock 1.44 GHz


Graphics Card Ram Size: ‎16 GB


Brand: ‎XFX


Series: ‎RX 9070


Item model number: ‎RX-97SWFB3W9


Item Weight: ‎3.3 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎12.99 x 5.91 x 0.04 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎12.99 x 5.91 x 0.04 inches


Color: ‎White


Manufacturer: ‎XFX


Date First Available: ‎March 6, 2025


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, Jul 10

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Provides a better value even above it's MSRP
Style: RX 9070 SWFT White
TLDR: Card punches way above it's price point and is a great value (if caught around it's msrp). I am an Nvidia card user I have been for some time my first GPU was A GTX750ti, followed by a GTX 950, GTX 1060 6gb, and an RTX 3060ti while all of these cards have something in common that benign they are budget minded cards that at the time offered good enough performance I had noticed something the 50 line of Nvidia cards were not hitting the mark anymore and the 60s were starting to fall short. It took to get high settings at 60-120fps in modern titles at just 1080p a 60ti which is sadly going up in price or isn't released in time to be competitive. With Nvidia dominating the top of the GPU market it appears they have forgotten how they got there which was a majority of gamers buying their lower mid tier cards. This has caused me to do a deep dive into AMD gpus, if nothing else it would waste some time reading something I thought I already knew. AMD delivers cards that were not only comparable but relatively close to their Nvidia counter part but in some cases better and reliably cheaper. Stunned upon reading this and seeing tests it appears AMD was really doing something right which if you love Nvidia that seemed impossible but it was true AMD while lacking in some features ie ray tracing was still able to do all be it not well but they could. This line up was set to launch soon and I was looking into their previous gen and though okay this will be a 800-1100 card but at msrp of 549 it's a steal this thing does everything great not perfect but great. Ray tracing leaves a bit to be desired but it handly can at 1080p, with its excessive vram and great power consumption to fps ratios this card in my opinion should be crowned king for 1080p gaming at the 500-700 price point in the new and current market for gpus (03/2025). Congratulations AMD you have won me over from Nvidia hopefully they keeping aiming for the right markets and the right user base that Nvidia seems to have thrown away. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 8, 2025 by Charles Gibson

  • Works great, except OC or downclocking the VRAM on Linux, great benching, MST works fine
Style: RX 580
EDIT 2: Have now tested the card with 6 monitors (first newest pic -- not to be confused with the older, mismatched size monitors in previous pics, where one was running off an RPi). The active/powered MST hub I attached works, and it DOES support all 6 screens, no additional configurations needed (even on Linux! as that's what I use). [NOTE: MST stands for Multi-Stream Transport, and it is the ability of later DisplayPort and Mini DisplayPort to attach 2 or 3 monitors to the same DP connector that show as physically separate screens (NOT just duplicating the screen the way some HDMI "splitters" do)]. I have tested this with both 1080p and 720p (I use 720, because my eyes are just too bad to see the smaller text, and previous scaling settings sometimes conflicted with certain programs), and both settings work fine. I am very impressed, overall, with how much this card is able to do. Other than OC on Linux or downclocking the VRAM, the only other things I can think another user might need to test are higher res monitors (I will NOT be testing that, due to eyes) and VR performance (probably will not be able to test this myself for at least a while, if I even am able to, at all, with my awful eyesight). Looking back at the original review, though, I DO have to update a couple other things: 1) I have not experienced that screeching noise in a long time. It might have been a wire I was using. 2) When I wrote that fan controller, it is no longer quieter than my RPi, although it is still quieter than my new high-powered fans (in other newest pic). 3) I have tried it with some games, and it plays them fine. It also benches really well on Heaven -- I tested it a while back across a 2x2 of my monitors (before buying the newest ones) with max spec and 3D anaglyph, and it still ran well, so you can easily use this for most games. ----- EDIT 1: Have now had card for about a year, and I've added more monitors to it, as you'll see in my newest pics. It's still going strong, but I did replace the thermal paste on the sink with Arctic MX 4. I find that I was able to lower temps on it by getting more powerful fans and improving cable management. Have written software to control the fans and clock on it from a Web UI, but I have had no luck getting it to overclock to the supposed 1386MHz, nor have I had any luck clocking down the VRAM. Perhaps that is the curse of using Linux, but I USUALLY use it just to run many screens, so I don't particularly NEED to OC the GPU clock. Would be nice if the VRAM clock rate could stay down, though, to save power -- the issue I've had with that is that it keeps going back up to 2000MHz right after I write to the /sys/ driver file; screens flicker as it clocks the VRAM down, but then it goes right back up. IDK if such an issue exists on other 580s, so I can't rate that down, b/c it might not have anything to do with XFX. --------- ORIGINAL REVIEW: So far, seems to be working quite well. I am currently using it with 3 displays (2x 1080p monitors and 1x 1680x1050 TV -- aspect ratio sucks on the TV and can't display 1080p w/o part of the screen falling off the sides -- not the card's fault; it does that on whatever it's connected to). All of them are connected to the displayport connectors using DP to HDMI cables. Monitoring it from my sensors program, it tends to run (after having warmed up) between 47-50°C idle, or around 49-52° with a YT video playing. Have not actually tried it for gaming or mining yet, though. Pretty much noiseless. My Rasp Pi with coolers is actually louder than this card. Do, however, recommend that your case be designed with airflow in mind, and maybe get more powerful fans. When I was using a positive-pressure design, the air passing over it and through the holes in the PCIe slots was not enough, and it both idled around 53-55°C, AND it pushed my CPU temps up by around 5-7°, as well (CPU is right above it). Changed this, and both cooled down by several degrees. Running it with Debian GNU+Linux, and as long as you have the amdgpu driver installed, it seems to have no issues. Sadly, have not found any software to control its clocks or fans through GNU+Linux, though. NOTE: It's important to know that it actually registers as an RX 470/480. I talked with someone about this, and it's because it uses the same Polaris chips, just clocked up and updated. Couple little glitches that sorta irk me, but not enough to bring down score: 1) Sometimes, it produces a low screeching-like noise on startup for each monitor. Probably a signal transfer thing. Weird, only happens sometimes, a little annoying, scared me a bit at first. 2) It also causes my BIOS screen to flicker several times after POSTing and before the bootloader runs. Also freaked me out the first couple times, but now I'm used to it. Neither of the aforementioned glitches occurred when using my Ryzen 5 2400G iGPU (before purchasing this card), so I think it has something to do with the card itself (could be the wires, though, but I have no other DP devices to test them with). Not major, but things that I paid attention to, nonetheless. As far as I'm aware, if you experience this, it's not an actual issue, just a quirk -- will update on that if I need to, though. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2019 by G.S. Fordham G.S. Fordham

  • State of the Art / Graphical Powerhouse
Style: RX 7700 XT SWFT
Arrived at my doorstep in premium packaging. Installation was effortless, though keep in mind that this GPU is pretty beefy for a double fan one, def recommend an adjustable bracket. This beast scores high marks on just about anything you throw at it. Even at 2-3k, many AAA games will be running at 48-60fps on the highest settings (no ray-tracing). Fans are audible during intensive tasks but not too loud. Overall, I am blown away by its performance. BTFOs anything NVIDIA makes at this price range. Truly the People's mid-high range GPU! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2025 by Russell Meziere, Jr.

  • Sign for package- works good
Style: RX 9070 XT QICK White
Works good and looks good. The vendor doesn't tell you but I needed to sign for the package, it would be nice to know before purchasing.
Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2025 by Dang

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