
I've been using an eGPU (15" 2018 MBP i9, RX 580, 10.14.x) for over half a year and only ran into connect/disconnect issues once.

Using a desktop machine at the office for work has improved my work-life balance, and my productivity. Now I don't have to carry a bag to work, and my home laptop can cover things in a pinch. I still use the old MacBook Pro at home, but it's not my daily machine. It seemed to improve overall OSX responsiveness too, but perhaps that's just the new Mac Mini in action. If you're doing visual stuff, it's the budget version of a Mac Pro.

I switched to a Mac Mini at work (stock GPU build of course) with the same enclosure and graphics card, and the experience has been pretty delightful. The connect/disconnect experience is really flaky, and you'll probably spend a few times a week trying to figure out why the eGPU isn't connecting/disconnecting. But if you're using a portable MacBook Pro that you're connecting every day, I wouldn't recommend it. I had a good performance boost using Photoshop and Maya. A 64-bit Windows 10 requires 20 GB, while 32-bit needs 16 GB.I know this is about games, but I wanted to relay my experience using an eGPU (using the Razer enclosure and an AMD RX Vega 64) in a professional context. That being said, you can still run Valorant on a Mac Os, but only by using a Boot Camp program which will allow you to install windows onto the system.īut before we learn how to do that, let’s first take a look at all the devices which can support Windows 10:īy preparing your system, we mean that you should make sure that the Mac system has enough space in the drive to support Windows.


Vanguard is a kernel-level anti-cheat which is creating some problems in Windows itself, so it not being compatible with Mac doesn’t really come as a surprise to anyone. Mac is not compatible with Valorant’s anti-cheat Vanguard in any way.
