Skip to main content

AMD officially reveals new Radeon 300-series, R9 Fury at E3 2015

AMD has officially announced its latest line of video card at its E3 2015 press conference.

At the entry level is the R9 360, an extremely small card. Pricing was skipped. The next step up, the R7 370, was quoted at a $150 MSRP and “up to” 4GB of GDDR5 memory.

Taking a step up we have the R9 380 with 4GB of GDDR5 memory at $200, the R9 390 at $330 and the R9 390X at $430. AMD did not quote the architectures in these cards, but given that it also did not talk about new chips inside them, they are likely re-brands of existing hardware. All of the cards will support DirectX 12.

quantumcomputer

The real news, though, is Fiji, the company’s new architecture, which uses High Bandwidth Memory. To do that, CEO Dr. Lisa Su came on stage. She started by introducing the liquid-cooled Radeon R9 Fury X, which she says offers a 50 percent improvement in performance per watt over previous high-end Radeons. It will be joined by a less powerful, but equally efficient, air-cooled model called the R9 Fury. The Fury X will arrive on June 24th at $650, and the Fury will appear on July 14 at $550.

Perhaps the biggest surprise was the Radeon R9 Nano, which is also built on the Fiji architecture. The 6-inch long, air cooled card will be among the smallest on the market when it hits the market, yet offers performance in excess of the R9 290X with up to twice the performance-per-watt. No price was announced for the Nano, but it will appear sometime this summer.

AMD Radeon™ R9 Fury X Graphics: Product Overview

There will also be a dual-GPU Fury card, though the company didn’t show that card or give it a name. AMD says it will not arrive until the fall.

To show off its new hardware, AMD announced a concept computer called “Project Quantum.” Though roughly a quarter the size of a standard desktop PC, the company boasted its dual Fiji GPUs with High Bandwidth Memory can handle 4K gaming without issue. The desktop offers liquid cooling to keep the high-powered hardware cool, and its unique design separates the hot processing hardware from the power supply and other components.

AMD had several developers on stage to talk about its new hardware, and what support for DX12 will provide. Kam Vedbrat, Group Program Manager of Graphics for Microsoft, came on stage to talk more about the new technology. He boasted of performance, saying “In some of the workloads we’ve measured, we see things like, up to a 50-percent reduction in CPU usage per frame.” This frees up the processor to do other things, like work on game AI.

The Radeon 300 series will be available for purchase on Thursday, June 18.

Matthew S. Smith
Matthew S. Smith is the former Lead Editor, Reviews at Digital Trends. He previously guided the Products Team, which dives…
E3 2021 is officially a free, all-digital event featuring Nintendo, Microsoft, more
E3 2020 contingency plans

The ESA finally revealed the first official details about E3 2021 after months of rumors. The show will be all-digital in 2021 and feature many major gaming studios -- and some notable absences.

E3 2021 will take place from June 12 to June 15 as originally scheduled. While the ESA danced around whether or not the show would be in-person, today it officially confirmed a full digital pivot. The ESA previously said that the event would be a "reimagined" version of the show.

Read more
AMD will take the wraps off the newest Radeon RX 6000 GPU on March 3
amd announces radeon rx 5700 navi gpu

AMD's Radeon RX 6000 family is growing! The GPU maker announced that it will add a new graphics card utilizing the underlying RDNA 2 microarchitecture at an event scheduled for 11 a.m. ET on March 3. Folks on the West Coast will have to tune in at 8 a.m. PT for AMD's announcement.

"On March 3rd, the journey continues for #RDNA2," AMD wrote in a tweet from its Radeon account. "Join us at 11AM US Eastern as we reveal the latest addition to the @AMD Radeon RX 6000 graphics family."

Read more
RDNA 3 could make AMD’s Radeon RX 6900 XT successor 250% more powerful
amd ryzen 5000 announcement radeon oct 2020

Despite the fact that AMD had barely just announced its Radeon RX 6000 series graphics cards at the end of 2020 and the GPUs are still hard to find because of supply issues, innovation isn't stopping. AMD is already rumored to be working on its next-gen GPU that uses the company's RDNA 3 microarchitecture, which could give the graphics cards a performance lift of 2.5 times what is currently capable on the company's high-end Radeon RX 6900 XT today. The Radeon RX 6900 XT uses the same RDNA 2 architecture found on AMD's chips for the Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5 consoles.

The RDNA 3 microarchitecture is also known by Navi 31. Previously, it's been speculated that AMD could be adapting its use of chiplets from its Ryzen processors to its Radeon graphics chips to get more performance. This would be the first time that AMD would use chiplets on a graphics card, if these rumors prove accurate. The chiplet design is known as MCM, or multi-chip module.

Read more