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ATI Radeon HD 5670 Pro Reviews

computershopper‘s review Edit

The HD 5670 brings faster performance and triple-monitor support to $100 video cards. But if you’re excited about DirectX 11, consider a pricier, more powerful card.
8.5 Rated at:

Published on:
Jan, 2010

hardocp‘s review Edit

We were impressed with the performance of the ATI Radeon HD 5670 compared to the GeForce GT 240. In the sub-$100 segment, the ATI Radeon HD 5670 currently provides the best gameplay experience, period.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jan 14, 2010

ITreviews‘s review Edit

We wouldn't recommend the HD 5670 as an upgrade for gamers, but if you're looking for a low power graphics card that can handle multiple displays and HD movie decoding, this is a fine place to start.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Feb 02, 2010

HotHardware‘s review Edit

The Radeon HD 5670 will be available for purchase immediately at on-line retailers, in 512MB and 1GB flavors. If you're in the market for an affordable graphics card as an upgrade from an integrated solution or last-gen mainstream card, the Radeon HD 5670 is worth a serious look. AMD has just lowered the DirectX 11 cost of entry to below 100 bucks, and has done so with a product that doesn't skimp on features and offers very respectable performance for the money. That makes the Radeon HD 5670 a solid value in our book.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jan 14, 2010

PC Advisor‘s review Edit

The ATI Radeon HD 5670 is reasonably priced and ideal if you're interested in reducing the noise of your PC. It’s not the flashiest ATI Radeon card, but it's a great balance between entry-level gaming performance, environmental friendliness and affordability.
7.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Oct 21, 2010

www.pcper.com‘s review Edit

The new AMD Radeon HD 5670 graphics card is a great addition to the completely revamped lineup of graphics cards using ATI technology. The performance of the card is only on par with other $100 graphics boards like the GeForce GT 240 so we can't call it the runaway performance leader, but if you or someone you know is going to be looking for a GPU for under a Franklin, the HD 5670 is the most well-rounded of next-generation GPUs.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jan 14, 2010

TechSpot‘s review Edit

In terms of features, for gamers the Radeon HD 5670 offers no real advantage over the Radeon HD 4770. Support for DirectX 11 is next to useless at this level, and Eyefinity shouldn't be a big selling point either (for workstation use it might be useful). As far as gaming is concerned, the Radeon HD 5670 will get you by in most games if you are okay with playing at modest resolutions and visual quality settings.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jan 29, 2010

HardwareZone‘s review Edit

Casual and mainstream users and gamers who have been holding back on upgrading their graphics cards can rejoice, for the new Radeon HD 5670 is a solid mainstream gaming solution.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jan 14, 2010

techreport.com‘s review Edit

AMD has succeeded in bringing DirectX 11 under the $100 mark with the Radeon HD 5670, and for the money, this is a very capable little graphics card. Aside perhaps from Borderlands, the 5670 ran all of our games smoothly at 1680x1050 with antialiasing and detail levels cranked up. Gamers on tight budgets shouldn't require much more performance than that. Also, because it's based on AMD's latest architecture, this newcomer may perform better than its predecessors in GPU-compute applications—another selling point that could gain importance in the not-too-distant future.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jan 13, 2010

Tom's Hardware‘s review Edit

Are we saying the Radeon HD 5670 is a bad card? Certainly not, it's a respectable mainstream offering. It just costs too much. At $80, this product would offer performance more in-line with its price tag. But at $100, that spread introduces too many strong competitors into the equation. We've seen products change to adapt to the market many times before. At the $100 launch MSRP, however, a gamer is much better off investing a couple more dollars into a Radeon HD 4850 or GeForce GTS 250.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jan 14, 2010

tweaktown‘s review Edit

Aimed for people who want to get EyeFinity on the cheap or simply want to do a bit of gaming at medium detail with resolutions of 1680 x 1050 or below, the HD 5670 continues to offer great value for money.
9.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jan 29, 2010

computershopper‘s review Edit

The HD 5670 brings faster performance and triple-monitor support to $100 video cards. But if you’re excited about DirectX 11, consider a pricier, more powerful card.
8.5 Rated at:

Published on:
Jan, 2010

The average pro reviews rating is 8.2 / 10, based on the 12 reviews.


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