AMD's Full Teaser Text

On June 01, 2016 at 10 a.m. China Standard Time (3 a.m. BST / 4 a.m. CEST) the Radeon Technologies Group will be announcing:

  • Radeon™ RX 480 set to drive premium VR experiences into the hands of millions of consumers; priced from just $199
  •  First Polaris architecture-based graphics processor to deliver VR capability common in $500 GPUs; expected to accelerate the size of the VR-ready install-base and dramatically increase the pace of VR ecosystem growth
  • RadeonTM RX 480 specifications including:
  AMD Radeon RX 480
TFLOPs (FMA) >5 TFLOPs
Compute Units 36
Memory Bandwidth 256GB/sec
Memory Clock 8Gbps GDDR5
Memory Bus Width 256-bit
VRAM 4GB/8GB
Typical Board Power 150W
VR Premium Yes
AMD FreeSync Yes
DisplayPort 1.3/1.4 HDR

Set to formally launch on June 29th, the Radeon™ RX 480 will deliver the world’s most affordable solution for premium PC VR experiences, including a model that is both HTC™ Vive Ready and Oculus™ Rift™ certified and delivering VR capability common in $500 GPUs.

In a notable market survey, price was a leading barrier to adoption of VR. The $199 SEP for select Radeon™ RX Series GPUs is an integral part of AMD’s strategy to dramatically accelerate VR adoption and unleash the VR software ecosystem. AMD expects that its aggressive pricing will jumpstart the growth of the addressable market for PC VR and accelerate the rate at which VR headsets drop in price:

  • More affordable VR-ready desktops and notebooks: AMD expects that affordable PC VR enabled by Polaris architecture-based graphics cards will drive a wide range of VR-ready desktops and notebooks, providing a catalyst for the expansion of the addressable market to an estimated 100 million consumers over the next 10 years.
  • Making VR accessible to consumers in retail: Thus far, retail has not been a viable channel for VR sales as average system costs exceeding $999 have precluded VR-ready PCs from seeing substantial shelf space. The Radeon™ RX Series graphics cards will enable OEMs to build ideally priced VR-ready desktops and notebooks well suited for the retail PC market.
  • Unleashing VR developers on a larger audience: Adoption of PC VR technologies by mainstream consumers is expected to spur further developer interest across the ecosystem, unleashing new VR applications in education, entertainment, and productivity as developers seek to capitalize on the growing popularity of the medium.
  • Reducing the cost of entry to VR: AMD expects that affordable PC VR enabled by Polaris architecture-based graphics cards will dramatically accelerate the pace of the VR ecosystem, driving greater consumer adoption, further developer interest, and increased production of HMDs, ultimately resulting in a lower cost of entry as prices throughout the VR ecosystem decrease over time.

The Radeon™ RX Series launch represents the first salvo in AMD’s new “Water Drop” strategy aimed at releasing new graphics architectures in high volume segments first to support continued market share growth for Radeon™ GPUs. In May 2016, Mercury Research reported that AMD gained 3.2% market share in discrete GPUs in Q1 2016. The Radeon™ RX Series will address a substantial opportunity in PC gaming: more than 13.8 million PC gamers who spend $100-300 to upgrade their graphics cards, and 84% of competitive and AAA PC gamers. With Polaris architecture-based Radeon™ RX Series graphics cards, AMD intends to redefine the gaming experience in its class, introducing dramatically improved performance and efficiency, support for compelling VR experiences, and incredible features never before possible at these prices.

Supporting Quotes:

“VR is the most eagerly anticipated development in immersive computing ever, and is the realization of AMD’s Cinema 2.0 vision that predicted the convergence of cinematic visuals and interactivity back in 2008,” said Raja Koduri, senior vice president and chief architect, Radeon Technologies Group, AMD. “As we look to fully connect and immerse humanity through VR, cost remains the daylight between VR being the purview of the wealthy, and universal access for everyone. The Radeon™ RX Series is the disruptive technology that adds rocket fuel to the VR inflection point, turning it into a technology with transformational relevance to consumers.”

“The Radeon™ RX series efficiency is driven by major architectural improvements and the industry’s first 14nm FinFET process technology for discrete GPUs, and could mark an important inflection point in the growth of virtual reality,” said Patrick Moorhead, principal analyst, Moor Insights & Strategy. “By lowering the cost of ownership and increasing the VR TAM, Radeon RX Series has the potential to propel VR-ready systems into retail in higher volumes, drive new levels of VR content investment, and even drive down the cost of VR headsets.”

“We congratulate AMD for bringing a premium VR ready GPU to market at a $199 price point,” said Dan O’Brien, vice president of virtual reality, HTC.  “This shows how partners like AMD survey the entire VR ecosystem to bring an innovative Radeon RX Series product to power high end VR systems like the HTC Vive, to the broadest range of consumers.”

AMD Teases Radeon RX 480
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  • BenSkywalker - Wednesday, June 1, 2016 - link

    Actually this site stopped using actual Hz rating in the 90s- DDR made it problematic, it simply has been compounded since.

    Throwing out 256GB/sec for the actual bandwidth compared to say the 298GB/sec the only 290 had or the 357GB/sec that the 390 was offering would likely be a bit more friendly for people looking for quick information and not an AMD sales brochure :)
  • 0razor1 - Wednesday, June 1, 2016 - link

    I agree, a very valid point.
  • jjj - Wednesday, June 1, 2016 - link

    If anything AMD is being wasteful again with a 256 bit bus here. You can bet that Nvidia will go with less and save some on area and power. Ofc AMD will do better at higher res since some might even buy this for 4k - would struggle in 4k but with 4k monitors even bellow 300$, it's an option.
  • SetiroN - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    I can appreciate the price point but it is really disappointing to see that AMD couldn't reach higher frequencies with such a huge jump in litography and the switch to FinFET
    This part would be positioned much higher with the smaller Polaris (which they couldn't even mention at this point) actually introducing the VR ready lineup. Instead we're pretty much the old 390 at a TDP that is merely acceptable. Wow.
  • rhysiam - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    If the performance claims are accurate and we get 390-390x performance with 1x6 Pin connector from a ~$200 card, that's a pretty decent offering from AMD IMHO, who really cares about clockspeeds? I'd be more disappointed, actually, if AMD did have to push the clocks really hard to reach their performance target. Maybe this way we'll get aftermarket cards with an 8 Pin connector and a heap of overclocking headroom. Maybe not, of course. Nvidia did say that had to put a lot of work into their designs to hit the 1700+ Mhz they have on the 1080.

    But whatever way you shake it, this is good news for the gaming masses who are running 1080P @ 60hz monitors. If (and that's still an "if" at that stage), performance, price and availability are as promised, you'd have a hard time recommending anything other than this card for a decent 1080P@60 gaming rig until Nvidia release their mid range or respond with significant price cuts.
  • euskalzabe - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    Yup. To me it's either this RX 480 or the eventual 1060. I've bought in the x70 range for the past few generations, but since my monitor is still 1080p60, x70 level cards are not well "balanced" for this anymore. Example: I'm on a 770 that, while speedy enough, gets starved in modern games due to its 2GB VRAM (AC Unity is a great example). At this point in time, buying x60 level cards and renewing every couple years seems like the more sensible option.
  • jabber - Wednesday, June 1, 2016 - link

    Yeah the only reason I want to upgrade from my HD 7870 is the 2GB limit. If the 480 gives me 4GB and a 35% boost I'm in.
  • rhysiam - Wednesday, June 1, 2016 - link

    35%? Based on what's been said thus far, you should be expecting a card that's starting to approach double the performance of your 7870. Even a 290 (with its awful stock cooler) is approaching those kind of gains: http://www.anandtech.com/bench/product/1034?vs=106...

    Let's wait and see, of course, but I'd expect at least 80% or more from what we've seen.
  • slickr - Thursday, June 2, 2016 - link

    What? Assuming conservative performance numbers based on all the data we have, it will perform as a r9 390 which is over 50% of your GPU. For only $200 and 150w that is amazing.
  • jabber - Friday, June 3, 2016 - link

    I always expect to be disappointed so I aim low.

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