I'm just glad AMD is getting their $hit together GPU wise again finally. They have already done VERY well with their CPUs, now if they can get closer to what Nvidia delivers, it's gonna be another game changer. (Pun intended)
When the R9's came out I was stoked. I still have my R9 290 from 2013 and it still can handle most games at 1440p with some settings turned down. I was very disappointed with the Polaris architecture. All they did was make them more power efficient with the same performance as my 290. Hell, my 290 still beats the RX580 in some benchmarks... I am looking forward to getting a 5700XT when the new cards drop though
The Fury X was so limited by it's vMem but it was a big GPU that fought with the 980. Then AMD just rode on Polaris and we haven't had a true high end GPU for a while. Vega 56/64 were pro GPUs forced into gaming. The V2 was the same, it is a beast of a workstation card, that plays games while arguing with the 2080.
The 5700XT was... Well a 2070 killer and a 2070 Super fighter.
It'll be nice if AMD can finally field another Radeon that can actually challenge for the performance crown again.
How long has it been since the Fury X came out? :-(
The 50% perf/W improvement includes IPC as well as process improvements. They'd be well ahead of Nvidia if they could pull 2 gens of such improvements without process efficiency!
I really don't see how AMD can get a 50% boost over RDNA 1 without a new and wider memory controller.
The 5700XT is desperately starved for bandwidth.
It's like my modified Fury X. Tightened up the HBM timings and at stock speed I can get over 300GB/s in OCLMembench. Stock as a rock the Fury X gets between 180-220GB/s for memory bandwidth. At 500mhz or well DDR for 1000 effective, it's theoretical is at 512GB/s.
It's hard for me to compare apples to apples because the mods also undervolted and under-clocked the core. Though it's similar with the 5700 XT... You can get nearly the same performance with less power by undervolting and mild under-clocked.
Either way a Fury X at 1000/1000 blows the doors off one at 1050/1000. On stock bios and I need to push the volts but it takes 1150/1200 to match.
It burns a lot more power. Tuned up makes a much happier Fury X that gets a significant bump to perf vs watts.
So if AMD could just not have to bring their damn architecture for every clock, it's possible to get most of the way there.
Which is why I think...
A refined 5700XT with 384bit memory that drops even 1-200mhz core from where it is now with a matching drop in vcore. That's not adding any other extra transistors to the die. Bump it to 44 CUs from 32, drop the core clocks 2-400mhz... All the way there.
Look at the 2080 Ti vs the 2080 Super. Bigger silicon, significantly less clocks, but it still performs.