A:AnswerShort answer is yes and in general most AMD GPUs are good for video editing but there is almost always other factors to consider if you are looking to maximize the utility of your purchase. Is RX570 RS the best GPU for video editing? No but it is still quite good in my assessment assuming you are at an MSRP or below purchase price for the GPU. For the hobbyist, RX570 and most dedicated modern GPU's are beneficial. Most of the benefit is obviously found in rendering and when the parallel processing power is used during encoding of video but you need to keep an eye software compatibility as it can play a big role as to how well the GPU will be utilized. In some cases the video editing and or photo application(s) may favor an NVxxx GPU over an AMD GPU and vice versa. Also, you do need to consider the overall system specs such as CPU, RAM and SSD drive or drives and I would suggest multiple SSD drives if your system and budget allows for it. In theory you want at least one drive with fast sustained write speed. Also, editing in 1080p vs 4k is much less taxing on your system thus If you are editing 4k your system will be put to the test to a greater degree than editing a 1080p video. The weakest link in your system may become apparent when editing at 4k and may not be so apparent for 1080p is my point and 4k files are much larger than 1080p.
The system, utilizing my AMD RADEON RX570 RS 4GB , consists of a 1700x CPU, 16 GB DDR4 @ 3200mhz, 480GB SATA SSD, 250GB SATA SSD, 500GB HDD and it can edit 4k video quite well but it is not as fast as my primary system with a 2700x CPU, 32 GB DDR4 @ 2933 MHZ, and GTX1080 with 2x 500GB SATA SSDs, NVME PCIe4X 480GB SSD, 6TB HDD and a 4TB HDD. Both systems can edit 4k video but my larger and more complex editing projects are done on the latter system since its is better equipped for video editing at 4k and the better equipped system also costs a lot more.
A:AnswerThe card itself has an 8 pin connector on it but comes with a 2 6 pin adapter cable. so if your power supply has an 8 pin header or two 6 pin headers on power cables you should be fine.
A:AnswerTo answer your question I don't think bottlenecking would be a huge issue. My system has 16 gb of ddr3, an i7 2600, and a gtx 480 (which has recently been). When monitoring ram usage and stuff I've never actually used more than 8gb at a time so you should be fine. I'm going to be buying a 570 this Christmas for my system and I can let you know if you haven't already made a decision. The best part about gpus are you can always upgrade the rest of the system if you desire or it doesn't meet requirements
A:AnswerNot sure what the question is. I do not work for Best Buy. If the question is regarding the free games... I purchased the AMD Radeon card with that or similar offer. after purchasing I received an email with links to get the free games. The free games require you to register or sign up on a 3rd party website to download the games each game is on a different website. I downloaded Strange Brigade after sign up with Steampower.com
A:AnswerMake sure the issue isn't RAM. 12 to 16GB needed for many games. Yes the 6300 is older but you are more likely GPU bound. I would look at a new FX 570 or FX580 big uplift from the 460 series.
A:AnswerI run them on many different CPUS. I have Celerons, Pentiums, i7-7700k, an A8, and a 8350. I have not noticed a graphics bottle neck at all. Only thing I notice is on the lesser CPUs or harddrives, the graphics of cinematic scenes will stutter. This is not caused by a GPU issue. The fx6300 is not too bad and the only other bottle neck would be the HDD speed. This all comes down to what you are trying to do though. Autocad and gaming is fine.