Wednesday, November 8th 2023

AMD Puts Radeon Vega and Polaris GPUs on a Slower Driver Update Track

AMD is weaning the market off its older gaming graphics card series that predate the Radeon RX 5000 series. The company is reportedly putting older GPUs based on the "Vega" and "Polaris" graphics architectures on a slower driver update track, which means driver updates to these GPUs will be less frequent. The company's RX 5000, RX 6000, and RX 7000 series, on the other hand, will continue on with the current driver update track that includes one or more driver releases each month, including releases to fix glaring game bugs, or day-zero performance updates.

AMD over the past couple of months began segregating RDNA (RX 5000 series and later) and pre-RDNA (older than RX 5000 series) GPUs through their driver releases. The latest drivers come in an RDNA-only package (denoted by "rdna" in the installer's file name), which is around 600 MB in size; and a larger 1.1 GB package that supports both RDNA and pre-RDNA GPUs. The company now announced that the pre-RDNA GPUs will switch to a slower driver update track as is characteristic with older-generation GPUs that AMD wants to discontinue support for.
In a statement to AnandTech, AMD says:
The AMD Polaris and Vega graphics architectures are mature, stable and performant and don't benefit as much from regular software tuning. Going forward, AMD is providing critical updates for Polaris- and Vega-based products via a separate driver package, including important security and functionality updates as available. The committed support is greater than for products AMD categorizes as legacy, and gamers can still enjoy their favorite games on Polaris and Vega-based products.
So what are these pre-RDNA GPUs? These would span the Radeon RX 400 and RX 500 series "Polaris," the RX Vega series, and the Radeon VII. The Radeon RX 5000 series is now over 4 years old in the market, which makes the RX Vega series 6 years into the market, the RX 500 series 7 years, and the RX 400 series 8 years old.
Source: AnandTech
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127 Comments on AMD Puts Radeon Vega and Polaris GPUs on a Slower Driver Update Track

#126
Dr. Dro
ShihabWe're not comparing hardware here though, are we? Out topic is softawre.

As far as hardware is concerned, GCN1, 2, and 3 did receive some d3d feature-enabling patch-love (for whatever that was worth). No different than Maxwell.
There is no hardware without software, just like there is very little software without the hardware to back it up. The relationship between a graphics driver and the hardware is symbiotic, if either fails, the experience will suffer for it.
TheinsanegamerNIf you were a 980 or 1080 owner who didnt understand the game specific fixes included in game ready drivers, I'd say you probably deserve to have an AMD card with only 5 years of support. The artificial segmentation of DLSS is a separate issue.

New driver shave new fixes for new software. Hell, we saw this LAST YEAR. Remember rDNA3? Remember how AMD put rDNA2 on the backburner for 3 months? In those three months, rDNA2 users like myself did not receive new drivers, and within that time the 6900xt went from trading blows with a 3090 to trading blows with a 3080. The forums here were absolutely LIVID that AMD would do this.
Bingo.
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#127
Shihab
Dr. DroThere is no hardware without software, just like there is very little software without the hardware to back it up. The relationship between a graphics driver and the hardware is symbiotic, if either fails, the experience will suffer for it.
And like every analysis of everything in life, it is possible -and often required- to look at issues while holding everything else constant.

The thread is about software development cadence. Hardware only enters to the equation as a constraint, as it has been demonstrated. If we were talking about AMD's customer satisfaction or if this was another episode of the old Nvidia v. AMD flamewars, then sure, everyone grab a club and start swinging. But it isn't. The merits of one vendor supporting x feature while the other going for y half a decade ago has little effect here.
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