MARCH 2020 PCWorld 79
lacks DLSS, and we’ve tested it with ray-traced
shadows set to both Medium and Ultra. Metro
Exodus supports DLSS.
We tested it using the RTX preset in
the benchmark, which sets its ray tracing to
High and activates DLSS. A more intense
Ultra setting is also available, but we didn’t
test it here.
POWER DRAW, THERMALS,
AND NOISE
We test power draw by looping the F1 2019
benchmark for about 20 minutes after we’ve
benchmarked everything else and noting the
highest reading on our Watts Up Pro meter.
The initial part of the race, where all
competing cars are onscreen simultaneously,
tends to be the most
demanding portion.
Here’s where the switch
from TU106 to a cut-down
TU104 GPU makes a slight
difference. The EVGA GeForce
RTX 2060 KO sucks down
slightly more power than the
Nvidia Founders Edition. Not
by much though. It’s
interesting to note, but it isn’t a
practical consideration in the
real world.
We test thermals by leaving
GPU-Z open during the F1
2019 power draw test, noting
the highest maximum
temperature at the end.
Despite its small stature
and reused cooling design,
the EVGA RTX 2060 KO stays
nice and cool, never going
above 73 degrees even in its
overclocked form. It’s not all
roses though. Subjectively,
the EVGA KO gets louder than
F1 2019
(Frames per second)
LONGER BARS INDICATE BETTER PERFORMANCE
90
83
83
83
114
105
111
110
111
1080p 1440p
Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 5600XT
Sapphire Pulse Radeon R X 5600XT (new BIOS)
GeForce RTX
2060 (FE)
EVGA GeForce GTX
2060 KO
EVGA GeForce GTX
2060 KO Ultra
83
93
Radeon^118
RX 5700
Ray-Tracing Performance
(Frames per second)
LONGER BARS INDICATE BETTER PERFORMANCE
40
Metro/RTX preset SOTR/RTX Medium
Geforce RTX 2060 (FE) 51
35
SOTR/RTX Ultra
EVGA GeForce GTX^40
2606 KO 35 52
EVGA GeForce GTX^41
2606 KO Ultra 36 53