Although it has been leaked and teased, PowerColor has officially announced its new Radeon RX 9070 XT Red Devil Spectral White Edition graphics card. According to the company, "every component has been precision-engineered in pure white," including the PCB, heatsink, power connectors, and cooler shroud. The card also includes the large 'Hellstone' RGB element on the end, which can be customized to deliver a more heavenly light than the deep red of the standard all-black Red Devil.

The new PowerColor Radeon RX 9070 XT Red Devil Spectral White Edition, image credit: PowerColor.
The PowerColor Radeon RX 9070 XT Red Devil Spectral White Edition is a premium GPU designed for overclocking AMD's flagship RDNA 4 offering. It ships with an out-of-the-box overclock, dual BIOS modes, and an advanced VRM design to support additional tweaking and OC action. The triple-fan system is also described as "whisper-quiet."
This limited edition GPU includes a Red Devil Metal Keycap in its custom packaging. Now, you're probably wondering about the price. Although the Radeon RX 9070 XT has an MSRP of $599, very few models have been available at this price point. Most 9070 XT cards are OC variants, with prices jumping up 30% in most cases. As a limited edition all-white version of its flagship model, PowerColor's new Red Devil Spectral White Edition carries quite the price tag.

The custom Red Devil Metal Keycap looks pretty awesome.
The Micro Center page for the GPU lists a price tag of $899.99, which is a 50% price premium over the MSRP and $50 more than the all-black Red Devil variant.
Even as an option that will deliver faster performance via overclocking with exceptional cooling, you won't get anywhere near 50% more performance from the PowerColor Radeon RX 9070 XT Red Devil Spectral White Edition compared to an MSRP card. Also, it's not even the most expensive Radeon RX 9070 XT GPU at Micro Center; that honor goes to XFX's Radeon RX 9070 XT Mercury White Magnetic Air GPU, which costs $939.99.
The question is, will the whole tariff situation cause Radeon RX 9070 XT prices to climb even higher? We hope not.