Skip to main content

AMD’s ultra-high-end Vega GPUs set for release in the first half of 2017

amd vega coming 2017 radeonroadmap
AMD’s big release in 2016 has been its line of RX series graphics cards, which despite falling far short of Nvidia’s flagship cards when it comes to performance, offer tremendous bang for your buck. But that doesn’t mean there’s not a plan for those with deeper pockets and desires for even greater visual fidelity. It’s been confirmed that Vega, its ultra-high-end graphics processor (GPU), will be released in the first half of 2017.

The new target for release is a delay from the speculative October 2016 date that has been floated around in recent months. While that rumor did originate from AMD staffers, it’s now been put to bed, with the company stating for the record that we can expect Vega sometime between January and June 2017.

It could be that Vega is designed as the second in a two-punch combination from AMD, with its reportedly powerful Zen CPU possibly showing up in late 2016 or early 2017, but there’s been no word on any kind of joint launch or promotion as of yet.

It wouldn’t be a bad plan, as releasing the two new technologies in the same general time frame could easily lead to a new range of AMD-only systems, as well as gamers and enthusiasts doing two big upgrades to their rigs in one go, rather than staggered, singular upgrades.

As the true successor to AMD’s Fiji lineup cards that comprised the Fury range, Vega should offer serious performance and much better efficiency regardless of when it arrives. Dropping down to the 14nm FinFET design from GlobalFoundries will make AMD’s hardware architecturally more advanced than Nvidia’s Pascal lineup, which utilized 16nm FinFET transistors.

It will also boast High Bandwidth Memory 2 (HBM2), which should offer huge bandwidth improvements over just about any graphics line available right now.

The question from Nvidia’s side of things will be whether it can bring out the 1080Ti in time to compete directly. While price-wise it’s likely to be similar to the Titan X — in that it’s out of range for most people’s budgets — AMD’s Vega cards won’t be cheap either.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
The RTX 4090 is here, but AMD’s RDNA 3 GPUs are right around the corner
The AMD Radeon 7000-series save the date tweet

The much-anticipated Radeon RX 7000-series graphics cards will drop on November 3, exactly six weeks from today. This is according to Scott Herkelman, who just happens to be the Senior Vice President and General Manager at AMD Radeon, so the date is definite.

"Join us on November 3rd as we launch RDNA 3 to the world!" Herkelman tweeted earlier today, along with a graphic which said "RDNA 3 Nov." This means AMD will be announcing the new Radeon GPUs on the same day Nvidia announces its new GeForce RTX 40-series chips.

Read more
Intel Raptor Lake release date leaked, and it’s good news for AMD
Core i9-12900KS processor socketed in a motherboard.

A new leak confirms what we already suspected -- all signs point to Intel announcing its 13th generation Raptor Lake processors on September 27.

Considering that just yesterday, AMD revealed that Ryzen 7000 CPUs will become available on September 27, this spells bad news for Intel. Which giant will be able to steal the spotlight on September 27?

Read more
AMD Ryzen 7000 could hit new performance highs — at a price
AMD Ryzen processor render.

AMD Ryzen 7000 is just around the corner, and now, we've come to know the rumored specifications of the first four CPUs of the lineup, including the AMD Ryzen 9 7950X, Ryzen 9 7900X, Ryzen 7 7700X, and the Ryzen 5 7600X.

The specs certainly paint a positive picture of the upcoming Zen 4 range, with intensely high clock speeds, huge cache sizes, and a performance uplift that could reach up to 35%. Unfortunately, there might be one letdown for overclocking enthusiasts, as the CPUs will allegedly only allow undervolting.

Read more