Thursday, November 19th 2015
AMD Announces the Radeon R9 380X Graphics Card
AMD announced the Radeon R9 380X graphics card. Positioned between the Radeon R9 380 and the R9 390, this card starts at US $229, and takes advantage of a huge gap in NVIDIA's lineup, between the GeForce GTX 960 ($190) and the GTX 970 ($319). Based on the 28 nm "Antigua" ("Tonga") silicon, this SKU features the full complement of the chip's 32 Graphics CoreNext (GCN) compute units, amounting to 2,048 stream processors. It also features 128 TMUs, 32 ROPs, and a 256-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface, holding 4 GB of memory. The core is clocked at 970 MHz, and the memory at 5.70 GHz (GDDR5-effective), amounting to a memory bandwidth of 182 GB/s.
28 Comments on AMD Announces the Radeon R9 380X Graphics Card
Edit: After reading the review, i think i will buy a 380 and OC it. I wont pay 50 € more for just a 8% increase in 1080p.
Finally a full 7970 refresh.
For that performance, $229 isn't aggressive. There is a still a pretty big jump in performance (~35-40%) from this to a R9 390 or GTX 970.
Since this soundly whips the 960 and sends it scurrying home, it's a price well worth paying...for me at least.
**And before anyone jumps at me, look what all my GPU's are, so I'm definately being fair.
www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814161459&cm_re=R9_290-_-14-161-459-_-Product
My real question is who's buying? It isn't the people who know that the massive enhancements of Pascal/Arctic Islands are coming. It definitely isn't the upgrade enthusiast, as the Nvidia vs. AMD debate seems to have largely blown itself out with the Fury. The remaining market is people with a bit of money to spend, but severely disappointed with their current performance because a recently released game has maxed out their current card.
I just see this as showing up late to a party. You might have brought an excellent gift, but half of the guests are already gone and the thunder that you should have had just can't compensate for your tardiness.
I appreciate the offering, I just wish they had been much earlier with it. The cheap bastard in me still looks at a 6970 and just shrugs. Yeah, the 380 would be a great improvement, but 8-10 months of better gaming wouldn't be awesome enough to justify blowing that quantity of money. 4 months ago it would have been different. Maybe I'm losing objectivity, but it feels like a good card that won't find a huge market. That's a shame.
The 380/X wich is Tonga(Antigua) has 2048 Shaders/32 ROPs/128 TMUs
Seem's just like previous gen.like 7950/280 and 7970/280X,where 7950 is basicaly a Tahiti.
Yes not full release,but 380X will have also 256 bit interface,although is better than 285 and 280X by tiny..
The 380x beats the 960, but by very little. Comparing pseudo base clocks, the 380x is 14% ahead (note the listing for the 960 in this test is incorrect. look at previous tests). I just checked all 6 of TPU's 960 tests, and on average they OC to a performance level that is 20% above base. The 280x Strix in this article OC'd to 14% above, which seems typical of AMD cards lately. They push them closer to their max out the door, while the Maxwell cards OC well above base clocks. So in real life the 380x is about ~7% faster.
As to your test numbers, I'm pretty sure W1zzard's tests show a much greater than 7% difference between GTX 960 and R9 380X. But, you're welcome to wrap the numbers up whichever way you want to make the 960 look good. I agree, it DID look good, until it finally got decent competition.
Those were all 2GB 960s also, BTW.
380x is something like 113% of 960
Oc'ed 960 is 120%
OC'ed 380x by 14% is 128.82% of 960
Delta is 8.82%
I call IT math not a rocet science