Much as we’d like to talk about the Radeon Fury cards until the cows respawn, let’s meet the rest of the RX 300 range:
With AMD’s Radeon Fury cards now established as their flagship/top-end cards, the R9 300 series has moved down a notch in the grand scheme of things – they’re still fairly potent cards.
Along with the R9 390 series, AMD also introduced the R9 380, R7 370, and their current new bottom-end card, the R7 360.
| Radeon R9 390X | Radeon R9 390 | Radeon R9 380 | Radeon R7 370 | Radeon R7 360 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GPU | Grenada XT | Grenada Pro | Antigua Pro | Trinidad XT | Tobago Pro |
| 200 Series Counterpart | Radeon R9 290X | Radeon R9 290 | Radeon R9 285 | Radeon R9 265 | AMD Radeon R7 260 |
| Counterpart GPU | Hawaii XT | Hawaii Pro | Tonga | Trinidad | Bonaire |
| Stream Processors | 2816 | 2560 | 1792 | 1024 | 768 |
| GPU Frequency | 1050/1500MHz? | 1010/1500MHz? | 918MHz | 975MHz | 1.05GHz |
| VRAM | 8GB | 8GB | 4GB/2GB | 4GB/2GB | 2GB |
| Launch Price | $429 | $329 | $199 | $149 | $109 |
All of those cards should release sometime this year. For more information regarding each card, you might want to check out Eteknix’s leaked slideshow for each card revealed at the Press Conference here.
We should also probably note that the R7 370 card is actually powered by a twice rebranded GPU.
According to Eteknix, it’s almost the same GPU that powered the HD 7850 in 2012, in fact – that means GCN 1.0.
What that means is that the R7 370 does not support VCE (Video Codec Engine), TrueAudio or the exalted FreeSync feature sets.
The card is also somewhat underpowered when compared to the R9 270, so don’t pay attention to the “370” and instead focus on the “R7” warns Eteknix; it will likely be slower and, thus, not replace the R9 270.
Instead, go for the more expensive R9 380 or wait for a card to fill in the gap. And there’s always NVIDIA.
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