Absolutely, here’s the rewritten version:
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You know, it’s kinda wild thinking about the Chinese GPU scene lately. Noticed some serious leaps, like how the Moore Threads S90 is now duking it out with NVIDIA’s regular contenders. Seriously, who saw that coming?
So, imagine this: Moore Threads MTT S90 just casually outperforming NVIDIA’s RTX 4060 in multiple tests. But, honestly, no clue if that was expected or just a fluke, thanks to some next-level driver tweaks or something. Anyway, let’s backpedal a bit.
Chinese GPUs used to, oh, I don’t know, lag behind — mainly ’cause the hardware just wasn’t there. But with all this AI buzz and whatnot, these companies are throwing their hat in the ring. Firms like Huawei? Kicking it up a notch. And Moore Threads? They introduced PCIe Gen 5.0 in these shiny GPUs, believe it or not.
Okay, hang on. Before we jump headfirst into all those benchmarks from this blogger — who tracked the MTT S4000, by the way — remember that the S90 vibes with it ’cause they’re basically tech siblings. This Chinese blogger dug into tests covering all sorts of workloads: gaming, synthetic — you name it. And turns out, this GPU can actually tango with NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 4060. Makes you go, “Wait, really?” Yup. More on that later, promise.
So there’s this chart somewhere in my notes (wish you could see it, seriously) showing the MTT S90 comparing side-by-side with the RTX 4060. Get this, in Naraka: Bladepoint at some crazy 4K ultra settings, the S90 hits like 43 FPS, just nudging past the RTX 4060’s 42 FPS. Not too shabby, right? Especially when you remember older models struggled against much older NVIDIA offerings.
And then these driver updates they’ve been bragging about? Supposedly they’ve pushed performance by about 80%. Maybe that’s why everyone’s buzzing. I mean, we don’t know every nitty-gritty detail about the S90 yet, like specs or whatever, but it’s doing stuff on the PCIe 5.0 platform. But oh man, temper those expectations, ’cause unless reviewers dive in, we should keep a skeptical eye.
There you go. China’s GPU game — didn’t think I’d be this curious about it, honestly.