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Cyberpunk 2077: Ray Tracing on AMD GPUs Benchmarked!

This week, Cyberpunk 2077's long-awaited Patch 1.2 went live, bringing with it hundreds of bug fixes and gameplay tweaks. This update also enabled the use of ray tracing with an AMD GPU, meaning anyone with an RX 6000-series graphics card will now be able to enjoy the full array of ray traced lighting effects in the game. We benchmark every RDNA 2-based GPU to find out how just how well Big Navi can perform when ray tracing is enabled.

In this article, we’re only focussing on the raw performance of the GPUs, rather than a visual assessment of what ray tracing brings to Cyberpunk 2077. We have already looked at the visual differences, as well as DLSS image quality, in a previous piece of content back at the game's launch, which you can find over HERE.

We tested all of the GPUs at 1080p, 1440p, and 4K resolutions. First we tested using the Ray Tracing Medium preset, which enables ray traced shadows and medium lighting quality, but we also tested using the Ray Tracing Ultra preset which adds in ray traced reflections and bumps lighting quality to ultra. For further analysis, we benchmarked each of the ray traced settings individually to see how performance scales across the various settings, finishing with a look at DLSS performance.

Driver Notes

  • AMD GPUs were benchmarked with the Adrenalin 21.3.2 driver.
  • Nvidia GPUs were benchmarked with the 465.89 driver.

Test System

We test using a custom built system from PCSpecialist, based on Intel’s Comet Lake-S platform. You can read more about it over HERE, and configure your own system from PCSpecialist HERE.

CPU
Intel Core i9-10900K
Overclocked to 5.1GHz on all cores
Motherboard
 ASUS ROG Maximus XII Hero Wi-Fi
Memory
 Corsair Vengeance DDR4 3600MHz (4 X 8GB)
CL 18-22-22-42
Graphics Card
Varies
System Drive
  500GB Samsung 970 Evo Plus M.2
Games Drive 2TB Samsung 860 QVO 2.5″ SSD
Chassis Fractal Meshify S2 Blackout Tempered Glass
CPU Cooler
 Corsair H115i RGB Platinum Hydro Series
Power Supply
 Corsair 1200W HX Series Modular 80 Plus Platinum
Operating System
Windows 10 2004

1080p – Ray Tracing Medium

The first thing I noticed from our first chart is that not even AMD's flagship RX 6900 XT is able to hit 60fps at 1080p, using medium ray traced settings. In fact, it averaged 46FPS in our testing, a reduction of a whopping 62% compared to playing without ray tracing at all, and remember this is only the medium ray tracing preset, meaning there’s still some ray traced settings that haven't been enabled!

That level performance from the RX 6900 XT means Nvidia’s RTX 3060 Ti is actually faster at 1080p, but remember the 6900 XT is meant to be a £900 GPU, compared to the £369 MSRP for the 3060 Ti.

Elsewhere, both the RX 6800 and RX 6800 XT are averaging in the high 30s to low 40FPS region, which I’d say is just about playable, but enabling ray tracing still results in frame rate drops of over 60% for both GPUs. The RX 6700 XT, however, saw its 1% lows drop down to 25FPS, so that’s not what I’d call playable – it’s certainly not enjoyable – and to stress the point again, this is only 1080p medium ray tracing settings.

1080p – Ray Tracing Ultra

Sticking at 1080p but using the Ray Tracing UItra preset, things look even worse for AMD GPUs. Here, not even the 6900 XT can hold above 30FPS at all times, with its 1% lows dropping to 28FPS. The 3060 Ti is actually 14% faster than the 6900 XT at these settings, and that’s without even factoring in DLSS which would significantly increase that margin, as we will see below.

In fairness, Nvidia’s GPUs do also suffer big drops in performance when ray tracing is enabled, but that drop off is nowhere near as severe as we see from the AMD cards. Using these settings, the 6900 XT performs 73% worse than it does with no ray tracing at all, whereas the performance hit for the 3060 Ti is 51%. It's certainly still very significant, but it is not as drastic as the drop off for AMD GPUs while the 3060 Ti can also call on DLSS to help speed things back up.

1440p – Ray Tracing Medium

Dare we try gaming at 1440p with ray tracing enabled? Well, using the Ray Tracing Medium preset for now, here the RX 6900 XT is able to match the RTX 3060 Ti, when it was the slower GPU at 1080p, so that’s certainly good news… but it still couldn’t hold above 30FPS, with its 1% lows hitting 27FPS. That means performance remains 62% worse with ray tracing enabled compared to ray tracing disabled. As another comparison, the RTX 3080 is 52% faster than the 6900 XT with ray tracing enabled, despite being 6% slower when ray tracing isn’t being used.

As for the other AMD GPUs… well, if the RX 6900 XT can’t manage a stable 30FPS, neither can the rest, with the RX 6800 XT averaging 28FPS, while the RX 6800 managed 25FPS on average. The newest addition to the RDNA 2 family, the RX 6700 XT, averaged 20FPS with 1% lows of 18FPS.

1440p – Ray Tracing Ultra

Stepping up to 1440p with the Ray Tracing Ultra preset is really just more of the same… the AMD GPUs are getting hammered here, with the RX 6900 XT seeing its average frame rate drop off by 73% compared to playing with ray tracing disabled, so it hits an average of just 22FPS. No doubt about it, these settings are demanding for any GPU, as only the RTX 3080 and RTX 3090 are able to average above 30FPS using these settings – but once more, that is before DLSS is turned on, which is a real game changer for the Nvidia GPUs.

4K/2160p –  Ray Tracing Medium

4K/2160p –  Ray Tracing Ultra

Tackling both the 4K benchmarks together, no GPU – not even the RTX 3090 – is capable of even just 30FPS when playing the game at 4K with ray tracing enabled. That is, of course, talking about native 4K, when anyone with an Nvidia GPU wanting to play at 4K will enable DLSS, which is simply not an option for AMD GPUs until FidelityFX Super Resolution finally arrives.

Individual Ray Traced Settings

Within Cyberpunk 2077, there's three different types of ray tracing – reflections, shadows, and ‘lighting', the latter of which includes ambient occlusion, emissive lighting and global illumination. I benchmarked all of these settings individually to see the performance scaling of each one. This was done using the RX 6800, only at 1080p resolution, but we have also compared the performance to the RTX 3070.

The data shows that ray traced shadows are the least demanding of all the types of lighting in the game. Even then, they still cost 47% performance compared to playing without any ray tracing. Reflections are even more demanding, reducing performance by 58%, while enabling the Psycho mode for ray traced lighting will drop frame rates by 71% on its own.

Nvidia's performance lead in ray traced workloads is clear. Despite the RTX 3070 being the slower GPU in terms of rasterisation, it is anywhere from 33% faster when dealing with ray traced shadows, up to 62% faster when implementing the Psycho lighting mode. The more ray tracing work there is to be done, the faster – relatively speaking – the RTX 3070 gets compared to the RX 6800.

DLSS

With Nvidia's RTX GPUs, native resolution isn't the only way to game. In fact, DLSS can make a huge difference to frame rates with very little in the way of image quality losses. For a closer investigation of the difference it makes to visual fidelity, check back on our previous Cyberpunk 2077 performance analysis.

What we can see from the data is that DLSS can transform the game from being unplayable when ray tracing is enabled (averaging under 30FPS at 1440p for instance), to being perfectly playable and enjoyable. At 1080p, using DLSS Quality in tandem with the Ray Tracing Ultra preset boosts performance by 63% compared to native resolution, and that increases to 81% at 1440p when using the RTX 3070.

The other factor of course is that DLSS can be used without ray tracing, just to enable higher frame rates if that is your preference.

Closing Thoughts

There's a number of potential takeaways from this investigation, including the fact that no AMD GPU is capable of hitting 60FPS at 1080p, even just using the Ray Tracing Medium preset. The same can be said for 1440p, where not even the RX 6900 XT could hold above 30FPS at all times with ray tracing enabled.

What this data really says to me however, is just how much AMD needs a competitor to DLSS. That technology really is the difference in allowing Nvidia GPUs to play the game with ray tracing enabled, at decent frame rates. Nvidia GPUs are faster at ray tracing than AMD's GPUs to begin with, but even then, without DLSS I would be a lot less keen to recommend turning ray tracing on.

Without any form of upscaling technology right now – FidelityFX Super Resolution is currently slated for a release ‘this year' – it's simply not worth enabling ray tracing in Cyberpunk 2077 if you have an RDNA 2-based GPU. Even by just enabling ray traced shadows, arguably the least visually impressive lighting mode, frame rates are effectively cut in half. Let's hope FidelityFX Super Resolution will arrive soon, and let's hope it is good.

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KitGuru says: Nvidia undeniably has the upper hand for ray tracing in Cyberpunk 2077 – largely thanks to DLSS.

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