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AMD Graphics Upgrades Hardware Games

Air-Cooled AMD Radeon R9 Fury Arrives For $100 Less With Fury X-Like Performance 77

MojoKid writes: When AMD launched the liquid-cooled Radeon Fury X, it was obvious the was company willing to commit to new architecture and bleeding edge technologies (Fiji and High-Bandwidth Memory, respectively). However, it fell shy of the mark that enthusiasts hoped it would achieve, unable to quite deliver a definitive victory against NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 980 Ti. However, AMD just launched their Radeon R9 Fury (no "X" and sometimes referred to as "Fury Air"), a graphics card that brings a more compelling value proposition to the table. It's the Fury release that should give AMD a competitive edge against NVIDIA in the $500+ graphics card bracket. AMD's Radeon R9 Fury's basic specs are mostly identical to the liquid-cooled flagship Fury X, except for two important distinctions. There's a 50MHz reduction in GPU clock speed to 1000MHz, and 512 fewer stream processors for a total of 3584, versus what Fury X has on board. Here's the interesting news which the benchmark results demonstrate: In price the Fury veers closer to the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980, but in performance it sneaks in awfully close to the GTX 980 Ti.
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Air-Cooled AMD Radeon R9 Fury Arrives For $100 Less With Fury X-Like Performance

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  • Sigh. 28nm... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jahoda ( 2715225 ) on Sunday July 12, 2015 @04:02PM (#50094355)
    ..and just like Nvidia, still using .28nm process for the GPU, same as it has been since ~2010-2011... by "technology standards", this is and incredibly long period of time. I totally understand the issues with supply from TSMC, Samsung, etc, and that the products of "latest-and-greatest" in chip fabrication are supplying the smart phone and tablet industry as fast as they can.... But my point is that these days, every time I see either AMD or Nvidia releasing yet another hot and power-hungry rehash, I sadly shake my head. Gigs and gigs of RAM are great - so is 1440p and 60 fps, but I want lower-power consumption and I want less heat. I don't want increasingly complicated cooling solutions.
    • That's because manufacturers run into limits, especially around cost, since Moore's law has reached the end of the line. A transistor on 20nm or 14nm is more expensive than a transistor on 28nm.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Yeah, if you don't like it, talk to TSMC (and maybe Samsung), and the people that supply them. This isn't NVIDIA's fault, and AMD/ATI is in the exact same boat, so quit whining.

      • by oic0 ( 1864384 )
        Not to mention the cores are huge so yield rate is likely very touchy.
    • I guess it's just the way the engineering played out. Basically everyone except Intel is stuck on 28nm, so there's not much to work with... might as well pay your engineers to rig up a way to deal with all that heat. At least AMD is putting effective coolers on their cards instead of nVidia just putting the "prettiest" blower on there.

      I don't really share your want for lower-power graphics cards though. These are *desktop* parts connected to the electrical mains. I don't live in communist germany wh
    • by teac77 ( 1152415 )
      It's not a notebook GPU. It is a desktop GPU. Why would you be worrying about power consumption and heat? This is marketed toward PCs.
      • It's not a notebook GPU. It is a desktop GPU. Why would you be worrying about power consumption and heat? This is marketed toward PCs.

        BECAUSE I DON'T WANT TO HAVE TO SHOUT OVER ALL THIS FAN NOISE!

        Well, the noise issue is mostly solved with aftermarket coolers, but that still leaves power consumption and heat. I guess none of this matters for the occasional gamer, but if you do productive work on GPUs 24/7, and (gasp) pay for your electricity, then these things matter.

        (I've been building silent, often fanless computers since about 2003, since I simply don't want any extra noise where I live. Besides, I've never understood why it's OK

        • by Khyber ( 864651 )

          "BECAUSE I DON'T WANT TO HAVE TO SHOUT OVER ALL THIS FAN NOISE! "

          Son, unless you're running Delta fans, you have no right to say shit about noise.

          I've got a single delta fan louder than a QUAD SLI TITAN setup.

    • In the last years, Nvidia have made big strides in reducing their power consumption for a given performance. You can buy the "latest-and-greatest" in performance, which will outperform older cards, OR you can get similar performance in a smaller, cooler and cheaper package. The 750Ti comes to mind:
      It is "only" a midrange card, but with a power consumption of 60-70W it does not even need an additional PCIe power connector.

      Recently, AMD are also getting closer with HBM on the Fury (although they are still fal

  • Does it have good Linux drivers? I.e. that have the same performance, memory requirements etc. that the windows counterpart? Doesn't have to be free, only good.

    No? Then I'm not interested...

    • I'm sure they're fine with that. They'll just sell to the millions more Windows users.

      • We'll see if they'll be fine with the negative publicity if the Linux drivers are crap.

        • It's not news that the drivers for Linux are crap. They have been for many years.
          You're acting like this is something new, that all the old products and their competitors products have excellent Linux driver support.

          • by leonbev ( 111395 )

            NVidia's Linux drivers are just as bad, or even more so if you had the misfortune of having having a laptop with Nvidia "Optimus" integrated graphics over the past few years.

          • The open drivers work just fine for everything that's not bleeding edge. We'll see how the amdgpu driver comes along.

    • by oic0 ( 1864384 )
      Why would you buy a high end video card and then cripple it by using only linux. Im sure there are some niche uses, but its generally a waste. Spring for a windows license and dual boot to game.
    • by Khyber ( 864651 )

      They're not interested because of the general attitude of the Linux community.

      Same reason I don't contribute my driver fixes upstream. You people are never satisfied and your attitude shows it.

      I don't suffer ingrates.

  • Buggy support (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Benchmarks mean nothing when so many games have extra bugs with AMD products. They really need to do something about building up a reputation for stable drivers that offer stable performance, even for new games. Because right now, raw performance means dick to the customers when it comes to crashes and poor FPS.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    What is really interesting to me about these aircooled Fury cards is that even though the PCB of the card is much shorter than that of a typical flagship GPU card the heatsinks being use extend the card length out to the typical 12" length. Why is that interesting you say? the power consumption of the card is on par with other AMD GCN cards and when it comes to dissipating the associated heat it still requires the same mass of copper and aluminum fins to avoid temperature spikes the associated fan accelerat

  • by Fallen Kell ( 165468 ) on Sunday July 12, 2015 @09:54PM (#50095685)
    The Fury is really only competitive at 4K resolution. At lower resolutions 1440p, 1080p, etc., it gets beat pretty bad in pretty much every game out there (save for a very small handful) by the 980 and 980 TI. Given that the majority of monitors out there are still 1080p or 1440p it is hard to recommend this card.

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