Introduction

Radeon VII Vega Market Segment Analysis Price Shader

Units ROPs Core

Clock Boost

Clock Memory

Clock GPU Transistors Memory RTX 2060 FE $350 1920 48 1365 MHz 1680 MHz 1750 MHz TU106 10800M 6 GB, GDDR6, 192-bit GTX 1080 $460 2560 64 1607 MHz 1733 MHz 1251 MHz GP104 7200M 8 GB, GDDR5X, 256-bit RX Vega 64 $400 4096 64 1247 MHz 1546 MHz 953 MHz Vega 10 12500M 8 GB, HBM2, 2048-bit GTX 1080 Ti $675 3584 88 1481 MHz 1582 MHz 1376 MHz GP102 12000M 11 GB, GDDR5X, 352-bit RTX 2070 $500 2304 64 1410 MHz 1620 MHz 1750 MHz TU106 10800M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RTX 2070 FE $600 2304 64 1410 MHz 1710 MHz 1750 MHz TU106 10800M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit Radeon VII $700 3840 64 1400 MHz 1750 MHz 1000 MHz Vega 20 13230M 16 GB, HBM2, 4096-bit RTX 2080 $700 2944 64 1515 MHz 1710 MHz 1750 MHz TU104 13600M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RTX 2080 FE $800 2944 64 1515 MHz 1800 MHz 1750 MHz TU104 13600M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RTX 2080 Ti FE $1200 4352 96 1350 MHz 1635 MHz 1750 MHz TU102 18600M 11 GB, GDDR6, 352-bit RTX 2080 Ti $1300 4352 96 1350 MHz 1545 MHz 1750 MHz TU102 18600M 11 GB, GDDR6, 352-bit

AMD today launched its Radeon VII graphics card. The Radeon VII (pronounced "seven") is this year's most unexpected product launch. We walked into AMD's CES 2019 keynote expecting a substantive teaser of "Zen 2" processors, which we got, but the Radeon VII unveil was a pleasant surprise. This is the world's first graphics processor built on the 7-nanometer silicon fabrication process and implements several segment-first features to restore AMD's competitiveness in the high-end graphics card segment.At the heart of the Radeon VII is the second-generation "Vega" graphics architecture, and the new "Vega 20" GPU that made its debut late last year with the Radeon Instinct MI60. AMD has tweaked this chip for gamers by leveraging the switch to 7 nm and cranking up engine clock speeds significantly. The company has doubled both the memory capacity and bandwidth, eliminating many perceived bottlenecks to the "Vega" silicon.The Radeon VII in this review is being launched at $699, which is bang on par with the GeForce RTX 2080. What's more interesting is that at its launch event, AMD was directly comparing performance of Radeon VII with the RTX 2080. If this card succeeds as a product, AMD will have bounced back to the high-end segment, which it practically abandoned for the past couple of years. NVIDIA's steep pricing for its "Turing" graphics cards has allowed AMD to price the Radeon VII high enough to cover its high manufacturing costs and turn a profit, which should keep investors happy, too.NVIDIA's justification for higher pricing of "Turing" chips, however, is that the real-time ray-tracing and AI-acceleration hardware add billions of transistors to the GPU, making them more expensive to produce. Despite the switch to 12 nm, "Turing" GPUs indeed have among the largest silicon dies the company ever designed. AMD, however, does not have real-time ray-tracing or AI acceleration hardware features, and so it has a different list of deliverables.For starters, AMD is offering 16 GB of video memory, which it believes will offer a great deal of future-proofing as AAA game memory usage and productivity data sets increase in size every year. The company has also doubled memory bandwidth to an incredible 1 TB/s, which should help move the bottleneck away from memory. AMD also appears to be focusing heavily on this card's 4K UHD gaming performance and performance with certain productivity workloads that can leverage GPU compute. As if that were not all, the 16 GB could sweeten the GPU's value should crypto-mining take off again, thanks to new mining algorithms that take advantage of over 10 GB video memory.Radeon VII is the first high-end graphics card from AMD to feature a contemporary triple-fan aluminium heatsink reference cooler. The company has finally wised up to the realities of the axial blower cooler being way too loud and AIO liquid cooling solutions looking too clumsy. The company is also counting on the novelty value of the world's first 7 nm GPU to sell these cards.In this review, we have with us an AMD Radeon VII graphics card, which is strictly reference-design. You'll be able to buy this card through AMD's various add-in board (AIB) partners—they'll all use the same physical design with only make minor changes, like stickers with their own branding.