Home / Tech News / Featured Tech News / First AMD Radeon RX 7600M XT benchmark puts it on par with the RTX 4060 for laptops

First AMD Radeon RX 7600M XT benchmark puts it on par with the RTX 4060 for laptops

AMD announced the mid-range Radeon RX 7000 mobile GPUs a while ago, but we've yet to see many laptops featuring them. With that in mind, we haven't seen many benchmarks for the RX 7000 mobile series, but leaks are starting to come through. Recently, benchmark results for the RX 7600M XT appeared online. 

A video shared on bilibli (via HXL) shows a Chinese laptop that uses the AMD Radeon RX 7600M XT. The video shares the first 3DMark Time Spy and Fire Strike results of the GPU featured on the laptop. On the TimeSpy benchmark, the RX 7600M XT achieved a 10,451 graphics score. In Fire Strike, the graphics score rose to 30,398.

Fortunately, the manufacturer also included the RTX 4060 laptop GPU results on these benchmarks (same preset as the RX 7600M XT). With 10,969 points on the graphics test of Time Spy, the RTX 4060 laptop GPU was 5% faster than the AMD GPU. However, things changed in favour of the Radeon mobile GPU on Fire Strike, as the RTX 4060 came out with a graphics score of 26,931. This score suggests that the Nvidia GPU is 11% slower. Unfortunately, the laptop manufacturer didn't share the TGP specs for each GPU, so this comparison may not be entirely fair.

The AMD Radeon RX 7600M XT is a Navi 33-based mobile GPU with 2,048 streaming processors and a boost clock speed of 2.3GHz. Its memory subsystem comprises 8GB of GDDR6 across a 128-bit memory bus. The GPU's cTGP ranges between 75W and 120W.

KitGuru says: If these results are accurate, it looks like there is going to be tough competition in the mid-range gaming laptop space over the next year. 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Call of Duty COD

KitGuru Games: Predicting the Next Half a Decade of Call of Duty Releases

Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) famously once said: “The three absolutes in life are death, taxes and a new Call of Duty coming out every single year”. Sure enough, the US founding father has yet to be proven wrong, with Activision and a dozen studios having ensured that come the tail-end of any given year, there will be a new COD ready to release. And so, what can we expect from the franchise later this year? What about 2027, 2028 or even 2030? By looking back at the past two decades of Call of Duty games, their trends, progression and regression, I believe I can predict the next 5 years worth of annual COD entries.