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That's what I built during Covid by buying used parts off of ebay dirt cheap.
It still works great today and looks like you could build it for a couple hundred bucks.
Depending on overall budget you could go for AM5 but AM4 is still good, either 7600 or 5600 depending on socket
The 7900XTX has a 355 watt T.D.P. and it's considered most comparable in perf. to the RTX 4080 on Nvidia's side of the stack. which has a 320 watt T.D.P. If 72 watts costs 32 extra per year, then 25 watts is going to cost you more like $10. per year. Even if we're hating on A.M.D. and saying the 7900xtx should be compared with a 4070 ti super, the 4070 ti super has a 285 watt T.D.P., so the power consumption differential is only 70 watts. An RX 6600 only has a T.D.P. of 132 watt T.D.P., whereas the RTX 4060 only saves 17 watts of power over that, but really the 4070 ti super is most omparable to the 7900 xt which has a 300 watt T.D.P. and might just be A.M.D's. most. It's just not a significant cost increase unless maybe you overspec. your system and run the card longer than is reasonable. You'll likely be spending more chasing after efficiency than you will save as a result.
The price difference between an RTX 4060 and an RX6600 is somewhere along the lines of $100, so you'd be ready to retire the Nvidia card before you ever reached cost parity on electrical savings. Maybe not so much the A.M.D. card because those have extra V.R.A.M., but the way I see it is that you'll save more money in the long run extending the use of a card by a year instead of upgrading a card simply because you finally exceeded the limits of the memory buffer.
But really if you want something small with a discrete graphics card I'd consider an asrock deskmeet X600[www.newegg.com]. For $208 you get a small 8 liter formfactor case, an AM5 motherboard and a 500 watt 80+ bronze power supply. I believe they're even preinstalled.
But I don't really want to spec. out the other components for it right now because also Lunar Lake launched on the third[www.tomshardware.com], and it might just be that a new laptop or mini P.C. with integrated graphics might be the way to go if power consumption is really going to be a concern.
I have to get an idea of how good that new I.G.P.U. is because you don't want to run discrete graphics where integrated graphics will do on a whole new system.