AMD Unveils World’s First 7nm Gaming GPU – Delivering Exceptional Performance and Incredible Experiences for Gamers, Creators and Enthusiasts

AMD Rade­on VII gra­phics card pro­vi­des 2X more memo­ry, 2.1X more memo­ry band­width, up to 29 per­cent hig­her gam­ing per­for­mance on avera­ge, and up to 36 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance on avera­ge in deman­ding con­tent crea­ti­on appli­ca­ti­ons com­pared to Rade­on RX Vega 64 GPU –

LAS VEGAS, Nevada 

AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) today unvei­led AMD Rade­on™ VII, the world’s first 7nm gam­ing gra­phics card. It was desi­gned to deli­ver excep­tio­nal per­for­mance and ama­zing expe­ri­en­ces for the latest AAA, esports and Vir­tu­al Rea­li­ty (VR) titles, deman­ding 3D ren­de­ring and video editing appli­ca­ti­ons, and next-gene­ra­ti­on com­pu­te workloads.

Built on the enhan­ced second-gene­ra­ti­on AMD ‘Vega’ archi­tec­tu­re, AMD Rade­on VII pro­vi­des 2X the memo­ry, 2.1X the memo­ry band­width, up to 29 per­cent hig­her gam­ing per­for­mance on avera­ge, and up to 36 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance on avera­ge in con­tent crea­ti­on appli­ca­ti­ons com­pared to the cur­rent top-of-the-line AMD Rade­on™ RX Vega 64 gra­phics card1,2,3,4. For gamers, AMD Rade­on VII enables maxi­mum set­tings for extre­me frame­ra­tes at the hig­hest reso­lu­ti­ons. It also pro­vi­des seam­less, high-refresh HDR5 gam­ing at 1080p, ultra­wi­de 1440p and 4K, and enables next-gene­ra­ti­on pho­to and visu­al crea­ti­on appli­ca­ti­ons on razor sharp, vibrant 8K monitors.

 “AMD Rade­on VII is the hig­hest-per­for­mance gam­ing gra­phics card we ever crea­ted,” said Scott Her­kel­man, cor­po­ra­te vice pre­si­dent and gene­ral mana­ger, Rade­on Tech­no­lo­gies Group at AMD. “It is desi­gned for gamers, crea­tors and enthu­si­asts who demand ultra-high qua­li­ty visu­als, uncom­pro­mi­sing per­for­mance and immersi­ve gam­ing experiences.”

Game Developers and Partners Embrace AMD Radeon VII

Lea­ding game deve­lo­pers and part­ners are alre­a­dy embra­cing the incre­di­ble fea­tures, per­for­mance and expe­ri­en­ces that the AMD Rade­on VII gra­phics card pro­vi­des. The Ali­en­wa­re Area 51 2nd Gene­ra­ti­on Thre­ad­rip­per™ Edi­ti­on will now com­bi­ne the new AMD Rade­on VII gra­phics cards with 2nd Gene­ra­ti­on AMD Ryzen™ Thre­ad­rip­per™ pro­ces­sors to deli­ver power­house per­for­mance for supe­ri­or gam­ing expe­ri­en­ces in 4K. Also, the pro­fes­sio­nal esports gam­ing team, Fna­tic, will use AMD Rade­on VII gra­phics cards in its high-per­for­mance gam­ing PCs for trai­ning and online competitions.

In addi­ti­on, Ubi­s­oft plans to bring AMD Rade­on™ tech­no­lo­gies to its upco­ming AAA block­bus­ter, Tom Clancy’s The Divi­si­on® 2The Divi­si­on® 2will sup­port the advan­ced fea­tures gamers demand inclu­ding DirectX® 12 and sup­port for AMD Rade­on Free­Sync™ 2 HDR tech­no­lo­gy6, as well as tech­no­lo­gies such as shader intrin­sics, rapid packed math, and asyn­chro­no­us com­pu­te that help deli­ver supe­ri­or gam­ing experiences.

We’ve work­ed clo­se­ly with AMD to take advan­ta­ge of the latest next-gene­ra­ti­on AMD Rade­on gra­phics fea­tures in the newest install­ment of The Divi­si­on® series,” said David Pol­fedt, mana­ging direc­tor at Mas­si­ve Enter­tain­ment. “The Divi­si­on® 2 will levera­ge the per­for­mance and capa­bi­li­ties of the Rade­on™ VII gra­phics card to deli­ver smooth and awe-inspi­ring visu­als at 4K reso­lu­ti­on, while let­ting play­ers expe­ri­ence game-chan­ging per­for­mance as they race to res­cue Washing­ton D.C. from the brink of collapse.”

Built to unleash per­for­mance, enable extre­me gam­ing, and dri­ve the most deman­ding 3D ren­de­ring, video editing and com­pu­te appli­ca­ti­ons, key fea­tures of the AMD Rade­on VII gra­phics card include:

  • Excep­tio­nal capa­bi­li­ties: The Rade­on VII gra­phics card is built upon 7nm pro­cess tech­no­lo­gy, deli­ve­ring hig­her gam­ing per­for­mance than the AMD Rade­on™ RX Vega 64 gra­phics card3. Equip­ped with 60 com­pu­te units/3840 stream pro­ces­sors run­ning at up to 1.8GHz and 16GB of ultra-fast HBM2 memo­ry (second-gene­ra­ti­on High-Band­width Memo­ry), the Rade­on VII gra­phics card enables high-per­for­mance gam­ing and ultra-high qua­li­ty visu­als. Ground-brea­king 1 TB/s memo­ry band­width and a 4,096-bit memo­ry inter­face paves the way for ultra-high reso­lu­ti­on tex­tures, hyper-rea­li­stic set­tings and life-like characters.
  • Enab­ling real-time 3D and com­pu­te appli­ca­ti­ons: The Rade­on VII gra­phics card deli­vers the per­for­mance requi­red for deman­ding 3D ren­de­ring and video editing appli­ca­ti­ons, and next-gene­ra­ti­on com­pu­te workloads. It pro­vi­des up to 27 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance in the popu­lar open source 3D crea­ti­on appli­ca­ti­on Blen­der7, up to 27 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance in the pro­fes­sio­nal video editing, color cor­rec­tion and visu­al effects appli­ca­ti­on DaVin­ci Resol­ve 158, and up to 62 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance in the Open­CL™ Lux­Mark com­pu­te bench­mark9 com­pared to the AMD Rade­on RX Vega 64 gra­phics card.
  • Extre­me gam­ing per­for­mance: The AMD Rade­on VII gra­phics card deli­vers excep­tio­nal per­for­mance in DirectX® 12- and Vulkan®-based games, inclu­ding up to 35 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance in Batt­le­field™ V10, and up to 42 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance in Stran­ge Bri­ga­de®11, com­pared to the AMD Rade­on RX Vega 64 gra­phics card. It also deli­vers up to 25 per­cent hig­her per­for­mance in the wide­ly popu­lar esports title, Fort­ni­te®.12
  • Smooth gam­ing with Rade­on Free­Sync: With the high speeds of today’s gra­phics cards, frame­ra­tes often exceed the moni­tor refresh rate, caus­ing stut­te­ring and tearing. With AMD Rade­on Free­Sync13 tech­no­lo­gy, the popu­lar, stan­dards-based adap­ti­ve sync tech­no­lo­gy sup­port­ed by more than 550 gam­ing moni­tors, gamers can expe­ri­ence smooth game­play at every level. In addi­ti­on, AMD Rade­on Free­Sync™ 2 HDR tech­no­lo­gy6 offers more than 2X bet­ter bright­ness and color volu­me com­pared to sRGB14.
  • Unpar­al­le­led expe­ri­en­ces with AMD Rade­on soft­ware: AMD­Ra­de­on Soft­ware fea­tures Day‑0 game dri­ver sup­port and up-to-the minu­te game opti­miza­ti­ons for per­for­mance enhance­ments. Gamers can effort­less­ly cap­tu­re, stream and share their memo­rable moments and clutch vic­to­ries with Rade­on™ ReLi­ve; moni­tor per­for­mance and PC sys­tem info, and socia­li­ze with the AMD Link appli­ca­ti­on; and fine-tune a ran­ge of set­tings to fit their needs with Rade­on™ Watt­Man15 technology.

Three Games Included with AMD Radeon™ VII Graphics Card Purchase

With AMDs ‘Rai­se the Game Ful­ly Loa­ded’ bund­le, AMD plans to offer gamers com­pli­men­ta­ry PC ver­si­ons of the high­ly anti­ci­pa­ted Resi­dent Evil™ 2, Devil May Cry™ 5 and Tom Clancy’s The Divi­si­on® 2 with the purcha­se of an eli­gi­ble AMD Rade­on™ VII gra­phics card or Rade­on™ VII powered PC, as well as with the purcha­se of other eli­gi­ble Rade­on™ gra­phics cards and Rade­on™ powered PCs. Stay tun­ed for more infor­ma­ti­on on the pro­gram and whe­re to buy at: www.amd.com/raisethegame.

Pricing and Availability

The AMD Rade­on VII gra­phics card is expec­ted to be available begin­ning Febru­ary 7, 2019 for $699 SEP USD. Seve­ral lea­ding add-in-board part­ners plan to offer the cards.

Supporting Resources

  • Learn more about the AMD Rade­on™ VII gra­phics card here
  • Fol­low @Alienware on Twit­ter for the latest news and updates
  • Beco­me a fan of Rade­on on Facebook
  • Fol­low AMD on Twit­ter @AMD 
  • Fol­low Rade­on™ gra­phics on Twit­ter

About AMD

For more than 45 years AMD has dri­ven inno­va­ti­on in high-per­for­mance com­pu­ting, gra­phics and visua­liza­ti­on tech­no­lo­gies ― the buil­ding blocks for gam­ing, immersi­ve plat­forms and the dat­a­cen­ter. Hundreds of mil­li­ons of con­su­mers, lea­ding For­tu­ne 500 busi­nesses and cut­ting-edge sci­en­ti­fic rese­arch faci­li­ties around the world rely on AMD tech­no­lo­gy dai­ly to impro­ve how they live, work and play. AMD employees around the world are focu­sed on buil­ding gre­at pro­ducts that push the boun­da­ries of what is pos­si­ble. For more infor­ma­ti­on about how AMD is enab­ling today and inspi­ring tomor­row, visit the AMD (NASDAQ: AMDweb­siteblogFace­book and Twit­ter pages.

 

Cau­tio­na­ry Statement

This press release con­ta­ins for­ward-loo­king state­ments con­cer­ning Advan­ced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) inclu­ding the fea­tures, func­tion­a­li­ty, avai­la­bi­li­ty, timing, deploy­ment, bene­fits and expec­ta­ti­ons of AMD future pro­ducts inclu­ding the Rade­onTM VII gra­phics card, which are made pur­su­ant to the Safe Har­bor pro­vi­si­ons of the Pri­va­te Secu­ri­ties Liti­ga­ti­on Reform Act of 1995. For­ward-loo­king state­ments are com­mon­ly iden­ti­fied by words such as “would,” “intends,” “belie­ves,” “expects,” “may,” “will,” “should,” “seeks,” “intends,” “plans,” “pro for­ma,” “esti­ma­tes,” “anti­ci­pa­tes,” or the nega­ti­ve of the­se words and phra­ses, other varia­ti­ons of the­se words and phra­ses or com­pa­ra­ble ter­mi­no­lo­gy. Inves­tors are cau­tio­ned that the for­ward-loo­king state­ments in this docu­ment are based on cur­rent beliefs, assump­ti­ons and expec­ta­ti­ons, speak only as of the date of this docu­ment and invol­ve risks and uncer­tain­ties that could cau­se actu­al results to dif­fer mate­ri­al­ly from cur­rent expec­ta­ti­ons. Such state­ments are sub­ject to cer­tain known and unknown risks and uncer­tain­ties, many of which are dif­fi­cult to pre­dict and gene­ral­ly bey­ond AMD’s con­trol, that could cau­se actu­al results and other future events to dif­fer mate­ri­al­ly from tho­se expres­sed in, or impli­ed or pro­jec­ted by, the for­ward-loo­king infor­ma­ti­on and state­ments. Mate­ri­al fac­tors that could cau­se actu­al results to dif­fer mate­ri­al­ly from cur­rent expec­ta­ti­ons include, wit­hout limi­ta­ti­on, the fol­lo­wing: Intel Corporation’s domi­nan­ce of the micro­pro­ces­sor mar­ket and its aggres­si­ve busi­ness prac­ti­ces may limit AMD’s abili­ty to com­pe­te effec­tively; AMD has a wafer sup­p­ly agree­ment with GF with obli­ga­ti­ons to purcha­se all of its micro­pro­ces­sor and APU pro­duct requi­re­ments, and a cer­tain por­ti­on of its GPU pro­duct requi­re­ments, from GLOBALFOUNDRIES Inc. (GF) with limi­t­ed excep­ti­ons. If GF is not able to satis­fy AMD’s manu­fac­tu­ring requi­re­ments, its busi­ness could be adver­se­ly impac­ted; AMD reli­es on third par­ties to manu­fac­tu­re its pro­ducts, and if they are unable to do so on a time­ly basis in suf­fi­ci­ent quan­ti­ties and using com­pe­ti­ti­ve tech­no­lo­gies, AMD’s busi­ness could be mate­ri­al­ly adver­se­ly affec­ted; fail­ure to achie­ve expec­ted manu­fac­tu­ring yields for AMD’s pro­ducts could nega­tively impact its finan­cial results; the suc­cess of AMD’s busi­ness is depen­dent upon its abili­ty to intro­du­ce pro­ducts on a time­ly basis with fea­tures and per­for­mance levels that pro­vi­de value to its cus­to­mers while sup­port­ing and coin­ci­ding with signi­fi­cant indus­try tran­si­ti­ons; if AMD can­not gene­ra­te suf­fi­ci­ent reve­nue and ope­ra­ting cash flow or obtain exter­nal finan­cing, it may face a cash short­fall and be unable to make all of its plan­ned invest­ments in rese­arch and deve­lo­p­ment or other stra­te­gic invest­ments; the loss of a signi­fi­cant cus­to­mer may have a mate­ri­al adver­se effect on AMD; AMD’s receipt of reve­nue from its semi-cus­tom SoC pro­ducts is depen­dent upon its tech­no­lo­gy being desi­gned into third-par­ty pro­ducts and the suc­cess of tho­se pro­ducts; AMD pro­ducts may be sub­ject to secu­ri­ty vul­nerabi­li­ties that could have a mate­ri­al adver­se effect on AMD; data brea­ches and cyber-attacks could com­pro­mi­se AMD’s intellec­tu­al pro­per­ty or other sen­si­ti­ve infor­ma­ti­on, be cos­t­ly to reme­dia­te and cau­se signi­fi­cant dama­ge to its busi­ness and repu­ta­ti­on; AMD’s ope­ra­ting results are sub­ject to quar­ter­ly and sea­so­nal sales pat­terns; glo­bal eco­no­mic uncer­tain­ty may adver­se­ly impact AMD’s busi­ness and ope­ra­ting results; AMD may not be able to gene­ra­te suf­fi­ci­ent cash to ser­vice its debt obli­ga­ti­ons or meet its working capi­tal requi­re­ments; AMD has a lar­ge amount of indeb­ted­ness which could adver­se­ly affect its finan­cial posi­ti­on and pre­vent it from imple­men­ting its stra­tegy or ful­fil­ling its con­trac­tu­al obli­ga­ti­ons; the agree­ments gover­ning AMD’s notes and the Secu­red Revol­ving Line of Cre­dit impo­se rest­ric­tions on AMD that may adver­se­ly affect its abili­ty to ope­ra­te its busi­ness; the mar­kets in which AMD’s pro­ducts are sold are high­ly com­pe­ti­ti­ve; AMD’s issu­an­ce to West Coast Hitech L.P. (WCH) of war­rants to purcha­se 75 mil­li­on shares of its com­mon stock, if and when exer­cis­ed, will dilute the owner­ship inte­rests of its exis­ting stock­hol­ders, and the con­ver­si­on of the 2.125% Con­ver­ti­ble Seni­or Notes due 2026 may dilute the owner­ship inte­rest of its exis­ting stock­hol­ders, or may other­wi­se depress the pri­ce of its com­mon stock; uncer­tain­ties invol­ving the orde­ring and ship­ment of AMD’s pro­ducts could mate­ri­al­ly adver­se­ly affect it; the demand for AMD’s pro­ducts depends in part on the mar­ket con­di­ti­ons in the indus­tries into which they are sold. Fluc­tua­tions in demand for AMD’s pro­ducts or a mar­ket decli­ne in any of the­se indus­tries could have a mate­ri­al adver­se effect on its results of ope­ra­ti­ons; AMD’s abili­ty to design and intro­du­ce new pro­ducts in a time­ly man­ner is depen­dent upon third-par­ty intellec­tu­al pro­per­ty; AMD depends on third-par­ty com­pa­nies for the design, manu­fac­tu­re and sup­p­ly of mother­boards, soft­ware and other com­pu­ter plat­form com­pon­ents to sup­port its busi­ness; if AMD loses Micro­soft Corporation’s sup­port for its pro­ducts or other soft­ware ven­dors do not design and deve­lop soft­ware to run on AMD’s pro­ducts, its abili­ty to sell its pro­ducts could be mate­ri­al­ly adver­se­ly affec­ted; and AMD’s reli­ance on third-par­ty dis­tri­bu­tors and AIB part­ners sub­jects it to cer­tain risks.  Inves­tors are urged to review in detail the risks and uncer­tain­ties in AMD’s Secu­ri­ties and Exch­an­ge Com­mis­si­on filings, inclu­ding but not limi­t­ed to AMD’s Quar­ter­ly Report on Form 10‑Q for the quar­ter ended Sep­tem­ber 29, 2018.

©2019 Advan­ced Micro Devices, Inc.  All rights reser­ved. AMD, the AMD Arrow logo, Rade­on, Free­Sync, Ryzen, Thre­ad­rip­per, and com­bi­na­ti­ons the­reof are trade­marks of Advan­ced Micro Devices, Inc. Dell Tech­no­lo­gies, Dell, EMC, Dell EMC, and other trade­marks are trade­marks of Dell Inc. or its sub­si­dia­ries. Ubi­s­oft and the Ubi­s­oft logo are trade­marks of Ubi­s­oft Enter­tain­ment in the U.S. and/or other count­ries. DirectX® is a regis­tered trade­mark of Micro­soft Cor­po­ra­ti­on in the US and other juris­dic­tions. Vul­kan and the Vul­kan logo are regis­tered trade­marks of the Khro­nos Group Inc. Open­CL is a trade­mark of Apple Inc. used by per­mis­si­on by Khro­nos Group, Inc. Other pro­duct names used in this publi­ca­ti­on are for iden­ti­fi­ca­ti­on pur­po­ses only and may be trade­marks of their respec­ti­ve companies.

The infor­ma­ti­on con­tai­ned her­ein is for infor­ma­tio­nal pur­po­ses only, and is sub­ject to chan­ge wit­hout noti­ce. Time­lines, road­maps, and/or pro­duct release dates  shown in this Press Release are plans only and sub­ject to chan­ge. “Vega” is a code­na­me for AMD archi­tec­tu­re, and is not a pro­duct name.

  1. As of Dec 18, 2018. Rade­on VII fea­tures 16GB of memo­ry. Rade­on RX Vega 64 fea­tures 8GB of memo­ry. Nvi­dia RTX 2080 Ti fea­tures 11 GB of memo­ry. RX-266
  2. As of Dec 18, 2018. Rade­on VII fea­tures 1024 GB/s of memo­ry band­width. Rade­on RX Vega 64 (fron­tier edi­ti­on) fea­tures 484 GB/s of memo­ry band­width. Nvi­dia RTX 2080 Ti fea­tures 616 GB/s of memo­ry band­width. RX-267
  3. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on Intel i7 7700K,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, Rade­on RX Vega 64, AMD Dri­ver 18.50 and Win­dows 10. Using Assassin’s Creed Odys­sey, Batt­le­field 1 DX12,Battlefield 5 DX12,Call of Duty: Black Ops 4,Destiny 2,Deus x: Man­kind Divi­ded DX12,Doom (2016),F1 2018 DX12,Fallout 76,Far Cry 5,Forza Hori­zon 4 DX12,Grand Theft Auto V, Hit­man 2,Just Cau­se 4,Middle-Earth: Shadow Of War, Mons­ter Hun­ter World, Rise of the Tomb Rai­der DX12,Shadow of the Tomb Rai­der DX12,Sid Meier’s Civi­liza­ti­on VI DX12,Star Con­trol: Ori­g­ins ‚Stran­ge Bri­ga­de Vul­kan, The Wit­cher 3,Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wild­lands, Total War: War­ham­mer 2,Wolfenstein II: The New Colos­sus at 4K Max Set­tings: Rade­on VII scored: 36 fps,80.5 fps,62.2 fps,82.3 fps,65.1 fps,53.4 fps,89.5 fps,78 fps,76.6 fps,62 fps,72.8 fps,76.2 fps,53.3 ps,50.8 fps,54.3 fps,35.4 fps,58.3 fps,47.5 fps,97.1 fps,88.9 fps,86.7 fps,55.4 fps,36.3 fps,34.6 fps,93.4 fps respec­tively. Rade­on RX Vega 64 scored: 28 fps,59.2 fps,46.7 fps,68.0 fps,50.9 fps,40.2 fps,67.2 fps,61 fps,45.5 fps,49 fps,62.8 fps,60.1 fps,49.6 ps,42.6 fps,41.6 fps,29.4 fps,46.0 fps,36.3 fps,78.1 fps,69.2 fps,60.9 fps,41.4 fps,29.2 fps,28.3 fps,74.2 fps respec­tively. Across 25 titles, Rade­on VII aver­a­ged 29% fas­ter gam­ing per­for­mance vs Rade­on Vega 64. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-282
  4. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on AMD Ryzen 2700X,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, Rade­on RX Vega 64, AMD Dri­ver 18.50 and Win­dows 10. Across 4 con­tent crea­ti­on workloads/benchmarks: Davin­ci Resol­ve 15, Ado­be Pre­mie­re, Lux­Mark and Blen­der. Rade­on VII com­ple­ted in /scored 101s, 330s, 50202 and 92s respec­tively. Rade­on RX Vega 64 com­ple­ted in/scored 138s, 462s, 31013 and 126s respec­tively. Resul­ting in Rade­on VII vs Rade­on RX 64 per­for­mance uplift of: 1.27x, 1.29x, 1.62x and 1.27x respec­tively. Rade­on VII aver­a­ged 36% fas­ter con­tent crea­ti­on per­for­mance vs Rade­on Vega 64. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-283
  5. HDR con­tent requi­res that the sys­tem be con­fi­gu­red with a ful­ly HDR-rea­dy con­tent chain, inclu­ding: gra­phics card, monitor/TV, gra­phics dri­ver and appli­ca­ti­on. Video con­tent must be gra­ded in HDR and view­ed with an HDR-rea­dy play­er. Win­do­wed mode con­tent requi­res ope­ra­ting sys­tem sup­port. GD-96
  6. Free­Sync 2 HDR does not requi­re HDR capa­ble moni­tors; dri­ver can set moni­tor in nati­ve mode when Free­Sync 2 HDR sup­port­ed HDR con­tent is detec­ted. Other­wi­se, HDR con­tent requi­res that the sys­tem be con­fi­gu­red with a ful­ly HDR-rea­dy con­tent chain, inclu­ding: gra­phics card, gra­phics dri­ver and appli­ca­ti­on. Video con­tent must be gra­ded in HDR and view­ed with an HDR-rea­dy play­er. Win­do­wed mode con­tent requi­res ope­ra­ting sys­tem sup­port. GD-105
  7. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on AMD Ryzen 2700X,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, Rade­on RX Vega 64, AMD Dri­ver 18.50 and Win­dows 10. Using Blen­der 2.79a, Cor­nell Box Sce­ne, Pro­Ren­der 1.8, 2048 x 1840, 200 ite­ra­ti­ons: Rade­on VII com­ple­ted in 92.3s. Rade­on RX Vega 64 com­ple­ted in 126s. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-280
  8. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on Ryzen 7 2700X,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, Rade­on RX Vega 64, AMD Dri­ver 18.50, RTX 2080, Nvi­dia dri­ver 417.22 and Win­dows 10. Using Davin­ci Resol­ve 15 8K AMD test sequence. Rade­on VII com­ple­ted in 101s. RTX 2080 com­ple­ted in 104s. Rade­on RX Vega 64 com­ple­ted in 138s. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-273
  9. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on Ryzen 7 2700X,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, AMD Dri­ver 18.50, and Win­dows 10. Using Lux­Mark Lux­Ball HDR bench­mark. Rade­on VII scored 50202. RTX 2080 scored 30224. Rade­on RX Vega 64 scored 31013. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-278
  10. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on Intel i7 7700K,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, Rade­on RX Vega 64, AMD Dri­ver 18.50, and Win­dows 10. Using Batt­le­field V, DX11, Ultra set­tings 4K: Rade­on VII scored 68.1 fps. Rade­on RX Vega 64 scored 50.5 fps. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-284
  11. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on Intel i7 7700K,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, Rade­on RX Vega 64, AMD Dri­ver 18.50, RTX 2080, Nvi­dia dri­ver 417.22 and Win­dows 10. Using Stran­ge Bri­ga­de, Vul­kan, Ultra set­tings 4K: Rade­on VII scored 87 fps. RTX 2080 scored 73 fps. Rade­on RX Vega 64 scored 61 fps. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-268
  12. Test­ing done by AMD per­for­mance labs 1/3/19 on Intel i7 7700K,16GB DDR4 3000MHz, Rade­on VII, Rade­on RX Vega 64, AMD Dri­ver 18.50, and Win­dows 10. Using Fort­ni­te, Epic set­tings 4K:Radeon VII scored 46.9 fps. Rade­on RX Vega 64 scored 37.4 fps. PC manu­fac­tu­r­ers may vary con­fi­gu­ra­ti­ons yiel­ding dif­fe­rent results. All scores are an avera­ge of 3 runs with the same set­tings. Per­for­mance may vary based on use of latest dri­vers. RX-285
  13. Requi­res a moni­tor and AMD Rade­on gra­phics, both with Free­Sync sup­port. See www.amd.com/freesync for com­ple­te details. Con­firm capa­bi­li­ty with your sys­tem manu­fac­tu­rer befo­re purcha­se. GD-127
  14. Only attainable when using a Free­Sync 2 API enab­led game or video play­er and con­tent that uses at least 2x the per­ceiva­ble bright­ness and color ran­ge of sRGB, and using a Free­Sync 2 qua­li­fied moni­tor. Based on AMD inter­nal test­ing as of Novem­ber 2016. GD-105
  15. Over­clo­cking AMD pro­ces­sors, inclu­ding wit­hout limi­ta­ti­on, alte­ring clock fre­quen­ci­es / mul­ti­pli­ers or memo­ry timing / vol­ta­ge,  to ope­ra­te bey­ond their stock spe­ci­fi­ca­ti­ons will void any appli­ca­ble AMD pro­duct war­ran­ty, even when such over­clo­cking is enab­led via AMD hard­ware and/or soft­ware.  This may also void war­ran­ties offe­red by the sys­tem manu­fac­tu­rer or retail­er.  Users assu­me all risks and lia­bi­li­ties that may ari­se out of over­clo­cking AMD pro­ces­sors, inclu­ding, wit­hout limi­ta­ti­on, fail­ure of or dama­ge to hard­ware, redu­ced sys­tem per­for­mance and/or data loss, cor­rup­ti­on or vul­nerabi­li­ty.  GD-106