Skip to main content

AMD graphics cards have this one unsung advantage over Nvidia

AMD graphics cards have gotten a lot of the limelight recently, especially as the new RX 7900 XTX undercuts Nvidia’s RTX 4080 in performance. But as AMD has continued to refine its GPU performance, another big area of improvement has been bubbling under the surface — AMD Software.

It’s been AMD Software, Radeon Software, Adrenalin, and various other names in the past, but regardless of the name, AMD has continued to iterate and improve the software experience for its GPUs. And the version we have now is a big reason why AMD can go up against the best graphics cards.

Everything, all in one place

AMD Software's main window.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The biggest perk of AMD Software is that all of your settings are in a single spot. That doesn’t seem like a big deal until you actually want to leverage the many software features available to Nvidia and AMD graphics cards.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Nvidia has a much different approach. You can see your games and some quick account settings in the GeForce Experience app. Your critical game and display settings, though, are only available in the drab Nvidia Control Panel. On top of that, Nvidia’s features like Freestyle filters and Ansel are available in GeForce Experience, but not in the desktop app. You can only find those in the overlay.

I’ve used Nvidia GPUs exclusively for close to a decade, and I never used features like FreeStyle and Ansel in day-to-day use, simply because I couldn’t be bothered to track down where to find them. I actively avoided GeForce Experience on my personal machine — the app would constantly kick me out, and I’d have to sign back in to do something as simple as check for a driver update. The situation is even more convoluted now with Nvidia Broadcast. I had three Nvidia apps running on my PC at all times.

You don’t need to bounce through multiple apps and overlays to find features with AMD’s software.

AMD Software has everything in one spot, both in the desktop app and in the overlay. On the desktop, I can tune game settings and check for graphics drivers, and in a game, I can customize my picture settings while I’m playing rather than applying custom color settings in a dated app and hoping they stick (I’m looking at you, Nvidia Control Panel). Or I can do it all on desktop or all in-game, and that flexibility is great.

Overall, AMD and Nvidia have very similar software features available. There are a few exceptions, like Nvidia’s AI-enhanced camera features available through Broadcast, but AMD and Nvidia allow you to easily optimize your game settings, record and stream gameplay, capture highlights, and configure advanced graphics and display settings. The difference is that you don’t need to bounce through multiple apps and overlays to find those features with AMD’s software.

A smoother, more robust experience

Overclocking utility in AMD Software.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

AMD Software has a few features that make it even more helpful than GeForce Experience, too. For nerds like me, something as small as the option to reset your shader cache can make a world of difference. A big plus for AMD Software, though, is the built-in GPU overclocking utility.

You’re not getting an advanced overclocking program, but most GPUs don’t call for advanced overclocking in the first place. You can quickly boost your clock speed or memory speed with a slider, and AMD includes a few one-click overclocking profiles, as well. There’s even a built-in stress test to verify your overclock is stable. Nvidia supports one-click overclocking, too, but only through MSI Afterburner. It’s among the best GPU overclocking software, but it’s yet another utility you need to add onto the Nvidia stack to get all of the features AMD has in a single app.

You have a lot of options with this utility, too. The one-click settings are great, but you can manually tune your GPU, as well, and even tie specific overclocking profiles to games. In Destiny 2, I noticed the Overclock VRAM profile helped smooth out my frame rate a lot, so I have it applied only when I play that game. And every time I load up a game, AMD Software shows a small overlay with what I have enabled so I don’t need to bounce back to the software to double-check.

Web browser in AMD Software.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Beyond overclocking, AMD builds out its software with several quality-of-life features. There’s a snappy built-in browser, for example, so you can quickly look something up if you need to. There’s a search bar so you can find a setting without digging through menus. And once you have your settings configured how you want, you can export them as a profile and import them later in case you’re switching machines or need to do a clean install.

You don’t need to sign in to AMD Software, either. GeForce Experience requires an Nvidia account, and you have to sign on to use any of its features. I’m not a privacy fanatic where a sign-on screen will send me into a frenzy, but it’s annoying to constantly sign back into my Nvidia account just to use the features of a graphics card I paid for (especially when Nvidia’s social sign-on process is prone to fail).

Built-in overclocking, a web browser, the lack of a sign-on screen, and various small extras like a search bar help AMD Software feel like a smoother, more robust tool compared to GeForce Experience. That’s even before we bring in features like the AMD Link streaming utility, which looks like a huge plus now that Nvidia is discontinuing its GameStream service.

Not without problems

AMD's software overlay running over Destiny 2.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

AMD Software isn’t perfect, though, and it’s important to call out its flaws. For starters, it’s prone to bugs. On several occasions, settings menus simply wouldn’t display or the software would hang on a tab for a while. Restarting the app always resolved the issue, but these bugs still pop up from time to time.

In addition, the recommendations to tune your game settings are lacking. Nvidia includes a one-click optimization feature in GeForce Experience that will automatically tune your settings based on your hardware. It’s not perfect, but it provides a good starting point to tune your performance. AMD Software provides highly general suggestions like “decrease image quality” and “reduce display resolution,” which are far less helpful.

AMD Software game recommendations.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

My biggest issue is the overlay. Over and over, the overlay would slow my entire screen down to around 15 frames per second (including my game) and slowly bring up my settings. AMD Software is robust, but the byproduct of doing so much is that it causes your machine to slow to a crawl when you cram so many features into a game overlay.

I’ve found that using Alt + Tab is the best way to go if I need to adjust settings (AMD Software is very friendly on that front). Otherwise, I’ve mainly used the hotkeys to do things like save a recording or take a screenshot. On the plus side, you can customize your hotkeys, and it would be interesting to get everything set up through something like an Elgato Stream Deck in the future.

An unsung hero

Performance metrics in AMD Software.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

There’s plenty to talk about on the performance front between AMD and Nvidia, and ultimately, that’s what matters most when choosing a GPU. AMD Software doesn’t always get the attention it should, though. It’s packed full of features that unlock so much more for your graphics card outside of just playing games.

Nvidia has these features, as well, and in some cases, Nvidia goes further. Admittedly, I’ve missed the smooth background blur and auto-framing provided by Nvidia Broadcast, as well as the ray tracing filter available through FreeStyle.

Still, I’ve enjoyed how much AMD Software has to offer and how much I’ve experimented with it. Saving GIFs instantly from my games, tuning overclocking settings on a per-title basis, tweaking color settings to get my games looking just right … the list goes on. AMD and Nvidia both have their pros and cons, but I’ve undoubtedly used AMD Software far more than I ever used GeForce Experience.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
DLSS 4 could be amazing, and Nvidia needs it to be
Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 GPU.

I won't lie: Nvidia did a good job with Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) 3, and there's almost no way that this success didn't contribute to sales. DLSS 3, with its ability to turn a midrange GPU into something much more capable, is pretty groundbreaking, and that's a strong selling point if there ever was one.

What comes next, though? The RTX 40-series is almost at an end, and soon, there'll be new GPUs for Nvidia to try and sell -- potentially without the added incentive of gen-exclusive upscaling tech. DLSS 3 will be a tough act to follow, and if the rumors about its upcoming graphics cards turn out to be true, Nvidia may really need DLSS 4 to be a smash hit.
When the GPU barely matters

Read more
AMD might make a last-minute change to save a Ryzen 9000 CPU
AMD announcing specs for Ryzen 9000 CPUs at Computex 2024.

AMD has already said that its upcoming Ryzen 9000 CPUs based on the Zen 5 architecture are the fastest consumer PC processors, but a new report suggests Team Red could juice the CPUs even more. A report from Wccftech claims that AMD is considering changing the TDP rating of the Ryzen 7 9700X from 65 watts -- which is the power draw the chip was announced with -- to 120W.

It's not just more power for the sake of it. According to the report, AMD is considering this change due to how the Ryzen 7 9700X stacks up against the Ryzen 7 7800X3D. The Ryzen 7 7800X3D is easily the best gaming CPU you can buy, and that's mainly due to its use of AMD's 3D V-Cache tech. Without 3D V-Cache, AMD is reportedly worried the Ryzen 7 9700X will fall short.

Read more
AMD just revealed a game-changing feature for your graphics card
AMD logo on the RX 7800 XT graphics card.

AMD is set to reveal a research paper about its technique for neural texture block compression at the Eurographics Symposium on Rendering (EGSR) next week. It sounds like some technobabble, but the idea behind neural compression is pretty simple. AMD says it's using a neural network to compress the massive textures in games, which cuts down on both the download size of a game and its demands on your graphics card.

We've heard about similar tech before. Nvidia introduced a paper on Neural Texture Compression last year, and Intel followed up with a paper of its own that proposed an AI-driven level of detail (LoD) technique that could make models look more realistic from farther away. Nvidia's claims about Neural Texture Compression are particularly impressive, with the paper asserting that the technique can store 16 times the data in the same amount of space as traditional block-based compression.

Read more