Facebook Pixel Wired2Fire R7X3D 9070 XT Beast | PC Pro - technology - Lees dit verhaal op Magzter.com

Poging GOUD - Vrij

Wired2Fire R7X3D 9070 XT Beast

PC Pro

|

June 2025

A strong debut for AMD's Radeon RX 9070 XT, and if you have space to house it this is a striking choice

- TIM DANTON

Wired2Fire R7X3D 9070 XT Beast

If you read our review of AMD's Radeon RX 9070 XT graphics card (see issue 368, p70) then you'll know that Nvidia finally has serious competition at the high end. But it needs the right processing partner, which is where AMD's Ryzen 7 9800X3D comes in. While the Ryzen 7 7800X3D was great for gaming, it couldn't be easily overclocked; the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, on the other hand, is effectively AMD's unlocked Ryzen 7 9800X with extra cache.

Such a powerful pairing needs a suitable base, and British PC manufacturer Wired2Fire doesn't hold back. As its name gives away, the Gigabyte X870 Eagle WiFi 7 uses AMD's top-end chipset - and that means all the mod cons. PCIe Gen 5 support for one of its three M.2 slots, 2.5GbE and Wi-Fi 7 networking, plus dual USB-C 4 ports. Here, Gigabyte's EZ-Latch technology ensures that removing the giant GPU, M.2 storage and any PCIe expansion cards you may add is easy. A 2TB Kingston Fury Renegade Gen 4 card sits in the Gen 5 M.2 slot but is still supremely fast: 7,367MB/sec reads, 6,832MB/sec writes. You can also add more storage via two easy-access 2.5in/3.5in bays at the rear of the case.

MEER VERHALEN VAN PC Pro

PC Pro

PC Pro

Investors may still believe in Elon Musk, but Jon Honeyball isn't buying any of it

My day started badly. Still bleary-eyed at 6am, with a bucket of coffee sitting untouched beside me, I dropped the SIM-removal tool into my keyboard.

time to read

3 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

Green cloud

Don't entrust your jobs to dirty, energy-hungry servers:

time to read

2 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

"I've said it before, and I'll say it again: the biggest obstacle to security is inconvenience"

Have you seen those password books on Amazon? They're not a cybersecurity abomination, despite what you may think

time to read

7 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

"Cyber resilience is now treated as a matter of governance rather than pure technical compliance"

Rule Britannia, Britannia waives the rules... or why the shoulder-shrugging Cyber Security and Resilience Bill causes such problems for UK businesses

time to read

6 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

"Not to point any fingers here; I seriously doubt the fault lies with our esteemed editor"

Whether it's PDFs from PC Pro's editor, Outlook messages or his partner's photos, space is at a premium for Steve this month

time to read

9 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

"It's a pity there's an Elon-shaped issue with Starlink because the solution is otherwise superb"

The best-connected man in Huntingdon ensures his lab will be always online, takes a nibble at Apple and wonders why Dell will take half a year to deliver a new laptop

time to read

10 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

Are we building too many data centres - and could we build them better?

The AI arms race has sparked a rush to build data centres, but we should use them to offer free heating and other benefits rather than big boxes that will go out of date too fast

time to read

8 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

IT'S EASY WITH AN eSIM

After more than three decades, the physical SIM card is on its way out. Darien Graham-Smith finds out why we should all welcome the change

time to read

8 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

Pippin awful: Apple's doomed console

David Crookes reflects on Apple's ill-judged attempt to corner the gaming market with the Apple Pippin

time to read

9 mins

April 2026

PC Pro

PC Pro

AI & DEV TEAMS The start of a beautiful friendship

Are real-life programmers living on borrowed time? Nik Rawlinson explores the growing popularity of AI-powered development

time to read

9 mins

April 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size