AMD Radeon Fury X Series | HBM, Small Form Factor And Water Cooling | June 16th

From PC Gamer.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/2937...x-tech-specs-and-design-details-revealed.html

amd-radeon-fury-x-4k-benchmarks-100592003-orig.png
 
So why are there no benches yet? When does the card actually launch?

edit: oh, that is a nice coincidence. Benches above!

edit 2: rather untransparent as to what settings beyond "4K"

edit 3: no "appendix 2" images?
 
You just beat me by a minute, just note that these benchmarks are from AMD and not PC Gamer.

edit 2: rather untransparent as to what settings beyond "4K"
These are not supposed to be posted, the settings would be in the appendix as noted at the bottom. PC Gamer went ahead with just the flashy bit of the deck and didnt post the appendix.
 
An avg of 5 fps faster than a 980ti, that's too little. And why so much focus on 4K whats happening around 1080p and 1440p?. Need more benchmarks.
 
An avg of 5 fps faster than a 980ti, that's too little. And why so much focus on 4K whats happening around 1080p and 1440p?.
Well 4K will put to rest some fears of VRAM being a problem I suppose. That is a very conservative overclock, I hope it can be pushed A LOT more than that on water cooling.
 
450 and 370€ for the 390s in Germany.

4900 SEK (530€) for 390x
3900 SEK (420€) for 390

In Sweden, shit, the Fury X is going to be 8000 SEK or something...
The fury X price of $649 translated to SEK is 5200. Even with Swedish tax of 25% that'd be 6500 SEK. Which would be the "normal" price in Sweden (usually it's USD price times 10, no matter if 1 USD is 7 SEK or 8 or whatever).

Used to getting screwed on console hardware prices, and game prices, but never been this screwed on PC hardware...

Edit:
And in contrast, the 290x on tri-x coolers costs 3400 SEK (370 Euro or 420 USD, including taxes).
 
So faster than a 980 Ti in those hand-picked benchmarks.

I mean I'm not doubting that the 980ti is faster in some scenarios, but Witcher 3, Far Cry 4, AC Unity, Shadow of Mordoor, Bioshock Infinite, Crisis 3, BF4. Come on hand picked? It not like these games aren't totally benchmarked in nearly every review.

I mean they are even posting Nvidia optimized games. Crisis 3, Witcher 3, Bioshock Infinite, have all traditionally run better on NV hardware.
 
Well 4K will put to rest some fears of VRAM being a problem I suppose. That is a very conservative overclock, I hope it can be pushed A LOT more than that on water cooling.

Actually we do not know what the settings are, so we cannot even say really.

Textures could be set to medium, low, high, whatever.
I mean I'm not doubting that the 980ti is faster in some scenarios, but Witcher 3, Far Cry 4, AC Unity, Shadow of Mordoor, Bioshock Infinite, Crisis 3, BF4. Come on hand picked? It not like these games aren't totally benchmarked in nearly every review.

I mean they are even posting Nvidia optimized games. Crisis 3, Witcher 3, Bioshock Infinite, have all traditionally run better on NV hardware.

2 of those games you mentioned as being "Nvidia optimized" are AMD sponsored.
 
Actually we do not know what the settings are, so we cannot even say really.

Textures could be set to medium, low, high, whatever.


2 of those games you mentioned as being "Nvidia optimized" are AMD sponsored.

Yeah, and we really have to see the frametimes too.
 
Well 4K will put to rest some fears of VRAM being a problem I suppose. That is a very conservative overclock, I hope it can be pushed A LOT more than that on water cooling.
Typically the press decks dont even have OC numbers, I think this is a first. And going by the PC Gamer article, it seems like they're encouraging media to OC them.
 
Just eyeballing, it would also mean faster than Titan X since 980Ti is barely slower than Titan X.

Interesting that Mordor is included :D

Looks that way from these benches. Probably overclocks better too.

An avg of 5 fps faster than a 980ti, that's too little. And why so much focus on 4K whats happening around 1080p and 1440p?. Need more benchmarks.

Surely though, 4K was the big worry because there were concerns that 4GB VRAM was too little. But yeah, I would like to see more benchmarks, and independent ones too.

But so far looks promising for a $650 card.
 
Actually we do not know what the settings are, so we cannot even say really.

Textures could be set to medium, low, high, whatever.


2 of those games you mentioned are AMD sponsored.

In the list of like 10 games, yes that doesn't detract from the fact that if you look at a 980ti review, they benchmark the same games and more.

https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/Gigabyte/GTX_980_Ti_G1_Gaming/

However, I guess I didn't remember correctly about the others. Still, W3, Batman, and others definitely favor nvidia.

If you are still skeptical, as I am, just wait for reviews. I know I am, before I make any judgement. I'm just saying that's a lot of games and some of which that are optimized for NV to say they are cherry picked.
 
Typically the press decks dont even have OC numbers, I think this is a first. And going by the PC Gamer article, it seems like they're encouraging media to OC them.
If this thing is 50C at load, it should have crazy mad room for overclocking. I can't wait to see some of the AIB superclocks.
 
I mean I'm not doubting that the 980ti is faster in some scenarios, but Witcher 3, Far Cry 4, AC Unity, Shadow of Mordoor, Bioshock Infinite, Crisis 3, BF4. Come on hand picked? It not like these games aren't totally benchmarked in nearly every review.

I mean they are even posting Nvidia optimized games. Crisis 3, Witcher 3, Bioshock Infinite, have all traditionally run better on NV hardware.

I wonder if thats with or without gameworks features enabled. I wouldnt buy a $600+ card to not turn on every feature.
 
I mean I'm not doubting that the 980ti is faster in some scenarios, but Witcher 3, Far Cry 4, AC Unity, Shadow of Mordoor, Bioshock Infinite, Crisis 3, BF4. Come on hand picked? It not like these games aren't totally benchmarked in nearly every review.

I mean they are even posting Nvidia optimized games. Crisis 3, Witcher 3, Bioshock Infinite, have all traditionally run better on NV hardware.

No I meant more in the sense we don't know the settings, AMD have supplied these themselves, etc.

This bit is cool:

You’ll find an LED-illuminated Radeon logo on the face and outer edge of the card, as well as a new feature: 8 small lights located above the 8-pin power connectors. Dubbed “GPU tach” (as in “tachometer”) by AMD, more of these lights will flare to life the harder you push your graphics card—a nifty gimmick, though I’m not sure that cranking it to 8 has quite the same allure as cranking it to 11. A ninth green LED will illuminate when the GPU is put to sleep by AMD’s ZeroCore technology.

The design is the best they've ever come up with imo.
 
An avg of 5 fps faster than a 980ti, that's too little. And why so much focus on 4K whats happening around 1080p and 1440p?. Need more benchmarks.

They are focusing on 4k because that's what they are being called out over at the moment. They have to do something about the notion that "4GB isn't enough for 4k gaming!" that seems to be prevalent in the enthusiast community.

These cards are aimed at the very top end of the folks who buy GPU's so they have to convince those people to but this one instead of the Nvidia 980Ti at the same pricepoint.
 
No I meant more in the sense we don't know the settings, AMD have supplied these themselves, etc.

This bit is cool:



The design is the best they've ever come up with imo.

Oh, I completely agree, however others are saying the details are in a footer left out by PC gamer. Don't know if that's true or not, just nice to know the ballpark it is in reguardless of settings.

I totally agree though, when I heard about the GPU usage LED's I thought that was awesome. Being able to look through your case window for a rough estimate of usage without an external tool is nice.


Is 649 the liquid cooled Fury X?

Curious to see performance at lower resolution ie 1440p.

Yes, and AMD is touting pretty highly on its ability to OC the card with their cooling solution. 100MHz is a very modest OC compared to what other people have pulled off air cooled R9 2XX series cards.

I would love to see on of these bad boys benchmarked with a 250-400MHz OC if it's possible.
 
If this thing is 50C at load, it should have crazy mad room for overclocking. I can't wait to see some of the AIB superclocks.
Looks like no custom versions for Fury X. Only Fury and Fury Nano.

Is 649 the liquid cooled Fury X?
Yes.

Oh, I completely agree, however others are saying the details are in a footer left out by PC gamer. Don't know if that's true or not, just nice to know the ballpark it is in reguardless of settings.

I totally agree though, when I heard about the GPU usage LED's I thought that was awesome. Being able to look through your case window for a rough estimate of usage without an external tool is nice.
The appendix is included so that the reviewers can verify the numbers themselves.
 
If this thing is 50C at load, it should have crazy mad room for overclocking. I can't wait to see some of the AIB superclocks.

Yeah, the OC headroom on the card is one of the most exciting aspects, as they've made a big deal about how well these GPUs overclock. Cooler supports up to 500 watts of thermal capacity apparently.

PCWorld said:
Speaking of cranking it to 11—er, 8—AMD’s PR keeps stressing that the Fury X will be a kick-ass overclocker. The card’s design speaks to that, featuring a dual BIOS switch, 6-Phase power design with up to 400 amps of power delivery, and AMD’s standard SVI2 interface to the voltage regulator, which sports full telemetry readback and lets you tinker with power settings via AMD’s PowerTune. (If you didn’t understand any of that, don’t sweat it—they’re hardcore overclocking features.) And while the Fury X typically draws just 275W of power while gaming, the dual 8-pin connectors support up to 375W. Read: OVERCLOCK ME.
 
An avg of 5 fps faster than a 980ti, that's too little. And why so much focus on 4K whats happening around 1080p and 1440p?. Need more benchmarks.
5fps faster than a 980Ti for the same price, in a liquid cooled package that has a ton of OC headroom is actually pretty great.

I do think the graph still shows how we're not anywhere near ready to really master 4k just yet. Not on a single card, at least.
 
I think I might just get a 970 or a 980. The few benchmarks I've seen for the 390 and 390X are pretty good and they trade blows with the 970 and 980, but that power consumption is just too much. I'm only running a 7950 ATM, I don't much fancy increasing the consumption by over 100 watts. Besides I don't need that 8GB frame buffer as I only play at 1080p and I have no plans to get a new monitor and/or go Crossfire.

Plus you can still get Arkham Knight over here which is cool.
 
5fps faster than a 980Ti for the same price, in a liquid cooled package that has a ton of OC headroom is actually pretty great.

I do think the graph still shows how we're not anywhere near ready to really master 4k just yet. Not on a single card, at least.

HBM2, Pascal, and R9 4XX is when I believe we will see consistent 4k games at 60+fps. The bandwidth of HBM2 and 8GB+ along with a new node process and architecture improvements should make this next generation the biggest jump in quite a long while.
 
They are focusing on 4k because that's what they are being called out over at the moment. They have to do something about the notion that "4GB isn't enough for 4k gaming!" that seems to be prevalent in the enthusiast community.

These cards are aimed at the very top end of the folks who buy GPU's so they have to convince those people to but this one instead of the Nvidia 980Ti at the same pricepoint.

I'd be much more interested in how it handles VR content at 90+fps. Soon those are going to be the new very top end folks, since any frame drops mean VR sickness, and 90fps is the minimum for a true feeling of "being there".
 
HBM2, Pascal, and R9 4XX is when I believe we will see consistent 4k games at 60+fps. The bandwidth of HBM2 and 8GB+ along with a new node process and architecture improvements should make this next generation the biggest jump in quite a long while.

Yeah true, but that is not coming until a good way into 2016 and will likely be expensive initially.

Also, for those with the budget, I think AMD will be releasing their 8GB Fury X2 (or Fury 'Maxx') probably later this year.
 
This card is a hard sell IMO. Same price as a 980 Ti, nearly the same performance, and it's AMD. I was actually hoping it was going to be the card everyone hyped it up to be so that it would push Nvidia prices down, but it's not going to move the needle.
 
As a console user who is planning to build a PC I have this misconception that nvidia cards work well with most programs and games than AMD cards. I don't know if I gain this thought from reading comments over the years but is there any truth to this. Because a 5% increase doesn't seem worth it if Nvidia is known for being "better" and more user friendly.

Also I don't ever plan to overclock (it doesn't seem like something useful to me if I just want 1440p 60fps). Wouldn't it make sense for me to stick with Nvidia 980ti?
 
As a console user who is planning to build a PC I have this misconception that nvidia cards work well with most programs and games than AMD cards. I don't know if I gain this thought from reading comments over the years but is there any truth to this. Because a 5% increase doesn't seem worth it if Nvidia is known for being "better" and more user friendly.

Also I don't ever plan to overclock (it doesn't seem like something useful to me if I just want 1440p 60fps). Wouldn't it make sense for me to stick with Nvidia 980ti?

Yes, that's true for the most part. I've had AMD cards several times throughout my gaming career, AMD last generation, rocking a 770 now. A few hickups here and there with drivers, but nothing like what some users make it out to be.

With the main selling point of the Fury X seeming to be 4k performance and OC headroom, it seems like you'd be better served with a 980ti. But you should wait till the benchmarks hit to make a decision.
 
5fps faster than a 980Ti for the same price, in a liquid cooled package that has a ton of OC headroom is actually pretty great.

I do think the graph still shows how we're not anywhere near ready to really master 4k just yet. Not on a single card, at least.

Yeah to me the fury x sounds like a great deal against the 980ti, but it will come down to overclocked performance for me. It'll be interesting to see if a fully overclocked fury x can stay ahead of a fully OCed 980ti.
 
As a console user who is planning to build a PC I have this misconception that nvidia cards work well with most programs and games than AMD cards. I don't know if I gain this thought from reading comments over the years but is there any truth to this. Because a 5% increase doesn't seem worth it if Nvidia is known for being "better" and more user friendly.

Also I don't ever plan to overclock (it doesn't seem like something useful to me if I just want 1440p 60fps). Wouldn't it make sense for me to stick with Nvidia 980ti?

If you are buying a Gsync monitor stick with a 980 ti. Otherwise it doesn't really matter, get what you want. I have a Nvidia card in my desktop PC and an AMD card in my home theater pc, haven't had any major issues with either.
 
Yeah to me the fury x sounds like a great deal against the 980ti, but it will come down to overclocked performance for me. It'll be interesting to see if a fully overclocked fury x can stay ahead of a fully OCed 980ti.
You would probably need an extra $100 for a non-reference water cooled 980Ti, if you really want a "fully" OCed 980Ti.
 
HBM2, Pascal, and R9 4XX is when I believe we will see consistent 4k games at 60+fps. The bandwidth of HBM2 and 8GB+ along with a new node process and architecture improvements should make this next generation the biggest jump in quite a long while.
That's what I'm waiting for. I'm quite happy with my 970 until then.

As a console user who is planning to build a PC I have this misconception that nvidia cards work well with most programs and games than AMD cards. I don't know if I gain this thought from reading comments over the years but is there any truth to this. Because a 5% increase doesn't seem worth it if Nvidia is known for being "better" and more user friendly.

Also I don't ever plan to overclock (it doesn't seem like something useful to me if I just want 1440p 60fps). Wouldn't it make sense for me to stick with Nvidia 980ti?
If you want 1440p/60fps, you'll want to learn about overclocking man. That's not always going to be easy to achieve with the better settings in the newest games. Thankfully, overclocking is really simple. It's only ever complicated or overwhelming if you're trying to go to extremes to extract every last drop of performance from something.

As for AMD, there's some truth to it, but it can also probably be somewhat exaggerated at times. Between people who say there are never any issues at all and those who say that they're a piece of crap, the truth is in the middle and probably not so frustratingly bad that I'd recommend not getting an AMD card.
 
Those Benchmarks are from AMD. Usually done using game settings best suited for their hardware. Lets wait for some unbiased reviews.
 
Yes, that's true for the most part. I've had AMD cards several times throughout my gaming career, AMD last generation, rocking a 770 now. A few hickups here and there with drivers, but nothing like what some users make it out to be.

With the main selling point of the Fury X seeming to be 4k performance and OC headroom, it seems like you'd be better served with a 980ti. But you should wait till the benchmarks hit to make a decision.

Do you believe that some users are exaggerating their experiences? When is the expected benchmarks? Also when it says that it is watercooled does that mean there be a lack of space because of the additional watercooling unit? I'm just so confused about this card. I expected more information to be release when they announced it.

That's what I'm waiting for. I'm quite happy with my 970 until then.


If you want 1440p/60fps, you'll want to learn about overclocking man. That's not always going to be easy to achieve with the better settings in the newest games. Thankfully, overclocking is really simple. It's only ever complicated or overwhelming if you're trying to go to extremes to extract every last drop of performance from something.

As for AMD, there's some truth to it, but it can also probably be somewhat exaggerated at times. Between people who say there are never any issues at all and those who say that they're a piece of crap, the truth is in the middle and probably not so frustratingly bad that I'd recommend not getting an AMD card.


Maybe I just been seeing videos of people going to extremes for overclocking. I just get confused and worried that this would destroy my cards or I would mess up my future computer and I would hope to also use it for work as well as gaming.
 
Disappointed with the 390/390x so far. Was hoping for something impressive enough to sway me from the GTX 970 but considering I'm only interested in 1080p gaming right now, I think I'm happy with my decision to go with plan A.

I think I'm actually going to order it right now so I can install it in my PC this weekend. I doubt these 300 series reviews are going to drive any price drops with the 970 and if I order now, I still get the free Batman game and can start enjoying these games I've bought in the Steam sale.
 
You would probably need an extra $100 for a non-reference water cooled 980Ti, if you really want a "fully" OCed 980Ti.

Yeah I was gonna say the same thing.

A water-cooled card is going to have more headroom for overclocking than an air-cooled 980 Ti reference model. If you want a water-cooled 980 Ti to be able to match the $650 reference Fury X, you are going to have to fork out more like $700-800.
 
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