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Which is the best GPU for high-refresh competitive Valorant gameplay?

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I just picked up a 360Hz monitor and want to ensure I'm actually hitting those frame rates consistently. Since Valorant is so CPU-heavy, I’m stuck between getting a mid-range RTX 4060 Ti or splurging on a 4070 Super. What GPU provides the most stable 1% lows during chaotic, utility-heavy rounds?


6 Answers
11

Honestly, from a safety and reliability perspective, you gotta look at the AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT 16GB. Everyone always pushes NVIDIA, but the extra VRAM and raw rasterization performance are actuallyyy better for preventing those nasty 1% low dips during chaotic utility spam. It's way more stable for high-refresh 1080p than a mid-range card that might choke when things get messy!!


11

Honestly, if you're serious about those stable 1% lows at 360Hz, I'd play it safe and look at the ASUS TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 4070 12GB GDDR6X. It's a bit more conservative than the Super, but it's super reliable for high-refresh stability without breaking the bank. Just make sure your CPU can actually keep up with it, lol!


5

100% agree


3

yo, i actually went through this exact same headache last month when i upgraded to a 360Hz panel. tbh, Valorant is basically a CPU game, but you still need enough GPU grunt so you aren't hitting bottlenecks during those messy Viper ults or Astra walls, right?

In my experience, I would suggest going with the ASUS Dual GeForce RTX 4070 Super 12GB GDDR6X. I tried the MSI Gaming GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 8GB GDDR6 first to save some cash, but the 1% lows were just a bit too shaky for my liking when the utility started flying. The 4070 Super is lowkey the sweet spot because it stays rock solid above 400fps even when things get chaotic. Plus, it's better for long-term if you ever wanna play something that isn't just a tactical shooter. Just make sure your CPU can actually keep up... anyway, the 4070 Super is definitely worth the extra $200 for the peace of mind imo. gl!


3

I've been building competitive rigs for over a decade now. When I first tried hitting high refresh rates, I learned real quick that looking at average frames is a total trap. I basically spent way too much time swapping hardware trying to fix stuttering during utility-heavy rounds. My advice? Just go with any higher-end Nvidia card if you want the most stable drivers for eSports. I've switched back and forth between brands plenty of times, but for pure frame time consistency, their architecture handles the overhead better when the CPU is pinned. Honestly, dont overthink the specific version. Just get a triple-fan model from a reputable brand like ASUS and you'll be fine. The extra cooling keeps things from fluctuating when the server gets chaotic.


2

Just sharing my experience: so I actually went through this exact same thing last year. Honestly, I bought an MSI GeForce RTX 4060 Ti Ventus 2X Black 8G OC cuz it was cheaper, but I was so disappointed with the 1% lows during utility-heavy rounds. Basically, the frame drops felt worse than the high average fps. I wish I'd looked at the ASUS Dual GeForce RTX 4070 Super 12GB GDDR6X earlier like others said, but lowkey, even an AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT 16GB might've been more stable for the price... but yeah, ur CPU is definitely gonna be the main thing doing the heavy lifting here.


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