![]() ![]() Yep, Fiji’s shader array has a massive 4096 ALU lanes or “shader processors,” more than any other GPU to date. Here are its vitals compared to the biggest PC GPUs, including the Hawaii chip from the Radeon R9 290X and the GM200 from the GeForce GTX 980 Ti. Even the Xbox One and PS4 are based on GCN, although Fiji is an evolved version of that technology built on a whole heck of a lot larger scale. The Fiji GPU is AMD’s first new top-end GPU in nearly two years, and it’s the largest chip in a family of products based on the GCN architecture that stretches back to 2011. At the heart of the Radeon R9 Fury X are two new core technologies: the Fiji graphics processor and a new type of memory known as High Bandwidth Memory (HBM). If you’ve somehow missed out on this info, let’s take a moment to summarize. Over the past several weeks, almost everything most folks would want to know about the new Radeon GPU has become public knowledge-except for how it performs. We’ve tested in a range of games using our famous frame-time-based metrics, and we have a full set of results to share with you. At long last, after lots of hype, we can show you how AMD’s new high-end GPU performs aboard the firm’s snazzy new liquid-cooled graphics card. ![]() It includes information, pictures, tables, data, game testing, and more. This article is review of the AMD Radeon R9 Fury X. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |