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Edit - The RX 6700 XT is not the competitor of the RTX 3070 (and perhaps the RTX 3060 Ti), the RX 6800 is the actual competitor (but most of the time, I believe the RTX 3070 is priced higher, at least it is here in my neck of the woods). But regardless, whatever card you get, try to aim for a triple fan card as I believe these are better at cooling these beastly cards.
My Nitro+ RX 6900 XT, after >1hour of COD MW WZ SP campaign gameplay with maxed out graphics setting + RT @ 3840x1080, has a GPU junction temp (Hotspot) of 79C with GPU temp of 56C (with room temp at a comfy 23C).
The RTX 3070 falls smack between the RX 6700 XT and RX 6800 in terms of rasterized performance. I'd gotten the RX 6900 XT because it has decent'ish RT performance, but pretty good rasterized gaming performance. IF you want good RT (not RTX) performance, the RTX 3070 is the obvious choice, as DLSS 2.0 helps a lot with RT gaming performance. I'm awaiting AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution (basically AMD's answer to DLSS), though I believe it'd help with performance, it'd be behind nVidia's DLSS in performance).
Get the card that best 1. suits your budget, and 2. suits your gaming preference and resolution.
for what seems like a meh upgrade ? anyway 3 fans for sure.
it really depends on each coolers design as for how many fans it needs or can effectively use
https://www.wired.com/images_blogs/gadgetlab/fan_pc_3.png
Best to go with reviews of the specific cards, rather than a general 3-fan vs 2-fan comparison.
Most cases only have one place to install the PSU, and nowadays its almost always on the bottom. The most widely accepted orientation for the PSU is also to be installed with the fan pointing down, so long as the case you are using has enough space for air flow below.
The heat added to the interior of a case is generally not considerable, especially given the PSU's fan direction and ventilation blows the air out the back in almost all configurations.
Besides this, negative pressure is not always or even often the best choice. If that is what you mean by 'negative flow rate.' Its preferable to have balanced pressure, which just means as close to the same intake of air as exhausting as possible.
Sure doesnt sound like those people were 'goofs,' though.