



comfortably at 4K from a card this size is still a generation or two away.



Either way, the Radeon R9 Nano is poised to be a popular card, especially since small form factor PC console builds (think Steam Machines) are in vogue. It's also worth pointing out the card's robust API support -- DirectX 12, Vulkan, OpenGL 4.5, and



The Radeon R9 Nano will be available the week of September 7, 2015, for $649 MSRP.

There's a lot of talk from AMD about gaming at 4K on the Radeon R9 Nano. Based on what we've seen from the Fury X, 4K gaming should be within reach in some scenarios, though it's going to depend on the title and visual quality settings. We have a hunch that gamingat 4K from a card this size is still a generation or two away.Either way, the Radeon R9 Nano is poised to be a popular card, especially since small form factor PC console builds (think Steam Machines) are in vogue. It's also worth pointing out the card's robust API support -- DirectX 12, Vulkan, OpenGL 4.5, and Mantle The Radeon R9 Nano will be available the week of September 7, 2015, for $649 MSRP.

All this technical wizardry aside, how does the card actually perform? Quite well, according to AMD's own set of benchmarks. We'll have our own to share in due time, but for now, AMD is claiming its Radeon R9 Nano trumps NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 970 in mini ITX form at 4K resolution in several popular titles. It even manages to hit 60 FPS in Grand Theft Auto V, if AMD's data is to be believed."With the Radeon R9 Nano graphics card, AMD is enabling 4K class gaming in your living room in an exceptionally quiet, ultra-small design built to excel in today’s games and on the latest APIs like DirectX 12 and Vulkan. There simply is nothing else like it," said Matt Skynner, corporate VP and general manager, Product, Computing and Graphics Business Unit at AMD.