Skip to main content

AMD’s impressive Vega 7nm graphics cards arrive, but they’re not for gaming

AMD Radeon Instinct™ MI60 – The World’s First 7nm Accelerator

AMD debuted its first Vega graphics cards since 2017 but they aren’t designed with gamers in mind, despite their impressive specifications. These new 7nm graphics cards are the first that AMD has produced, ahead of the planned 7nm Navi consumer graphics cards expected to debut in early 2019. If AMD can stick to its plan to ship out at least one of the new Vega enterprise cards this side of the new year, it will be the first 7nm graphics chips outside of mobile to be launched in the computing industry.

Graphics chips, like CPUs, go through regular die shrinks — fitting more transistors into a smaller package. It leads to improvements in performance and power efficiency and is something that tends to happen every couple of years. AMD’s first-generation Ryzen CPUs were built on a 14nm process, while the second generation was built on 12nm hardware. The original Vega graphics cards were built on a 14nm FinFet process, while Nvidia’s new RTX graphics cards are based on a 12nm process. The new Vega Instinct cards drop down to an impressive 7nm.

Unlike those other cards, AMD’s new Vega graphics cards are designed with enterprise uses in mind. They are said to be optimized for deep leaning and high-performance computing scenarios and should see use in the scientific, automotive, and artificial intelligence fields.

There are two cards, the Radeon Instinct M150 and M160. Both are built on the Vega 20 architecture (not to be confused with Radeon Pro Vega 20) which is built on the TSMC 7nm FinFet process and have 16GB and 32GB of second-generation high bandwidth memory (HBM2), respectively. The new cards offer between 10 and 20 percent improvements in performance over their predecessor, the Instinct M125, by some metrics. However, the M160 offers double the memory bandwidth and as much as 10 times the performance in peak double precision performance.

Crucially though, these GPUs are designed to scale well together using AMD’s Infinity Fabric. AMD claims that up to eight of these new GPUs can be connected in a single server.

None of this matters much for gamers, as these cards are not designed to render the latest games, but to crunch far less exciting numbers. However, if AMD can ship these cards out as intended — before the end of 2018 for the M160 and early 2019 for the M150, per Engadget — then it suggests that 7nm GPU production is strong enough that consumer cards from the hotly anticipated Navi generation may not be far behind.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
AMD may soon launch a new GPU, but it’s probably not the one you think
AMD Radeon RX 6500XT graphics cards stacked on top of each other.

After months of silence, it seems that AMD might be readying a new graphics card -- but it's not the one most of us expected to see.

Instead of following the RX 7900 XTX and RX 7900 XT with an RX 7800 XT, AMD appears to be moving down a couple of notches. Rumor has it that its next GPU will be the RX 7600.

Read more
AMD is letting Nvidia win, and it needs to step it up before it’s too late
Nvidia and AMD CEOs are shown side by side in a split-screen view.

Since the launch of the Radeon RX 7900 XTX and RX 7900 XT, AMD has been awfully quiet on the graphics card front -- and it couldn't have picked a worse time to go radio silent.

With Nvidia quickly making its way through its RTX 40-series lineup, AMD doesn't have much more time before it completely falls behind. What's going on with Team Red?
Rise and fall

Read more
Nvidia isn’t selling graphics cards — it’s selling DLSS
RTX 4070 logo on a graphics card.

Nvidia does, of course, sell graphics cards. In fact, it sells most of the best graphics cards on the market. But more than ever before, the company is increasingly hanging its hat on its impressive Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) to sell GPUs rather than raw performance.

The RTX 4090 stands as a crowning achievement in the world of consumer graphics cards, but once you get down into the cards that most gamers will actually buy, the generational improvements start to slip. This became abundantly clear with the launch of the RTX 4070. The card has been well-received, and I even awarded it a rare Editor's Choice award in my RTX 4070 review. But that's despite its generational improvements, not because of them.

Read more