Meet The Cards: XFX & PowerColor

As there are no reference cards, for today's launch AMD sampled us the XFX Radeon RX 590 Fatboy. PowerColor also sampled us their RX 590 Red Devil. Both sport modest factory overclocks over the reference 1545MHz boost, and both feature dual BIOS with performance and quiet options. Broadly-speaking, if you're already familiar with PowerColor's Red Devil and XFX's GTS designs for Polaris, then you'll already know what these boards are like. 

Radeon RX 590 Series Cards
  XFX RX 590 Fatboy PowerColor RX 590 Red Devil Radeon RX 590 (Reference) Radeon RX 580
(Reference)
Boost Clock 1580MHz 1576MHz 1545MHz 1340MHz
Memory Clock 8Gbps 8Gbps 8Gbps 8Gbps
VRAM 8GB 8GB 8GB 8GB
TBP TBA TBA 225W 185W
Length 10.63" 10" N/A N/A
Width 2.5 Slot 2.5 Slot N/A N/A
Cooler Type Open Air Open Air N/A N/A
Price TBA ~$299? $279 $229

Both of the cards are relatively typical for custom factory overclocked designs, featuring thick heatsinks, dual axial fans, 1x8pin + 1x6pin for power, and the extremely essential presence of LEDs. Right now we don't have a definitive answer on price, but expect them to be in the high $200s to low $300s range where heavily factory-overclocked GTX 1060 6GB cards reside. For the opening launch window, all the partner cards are marked at the $279 SEP.

XFX Radeon RX 590 Fatboy

From the outside, the XFX Radeon RX 590 Fatboy looks to be much of the same with its existing RX 500 and 400 series models. The card's amusing namesake comes from the new heatsink design that XFX is calling the 'Fatboy Unibody VRM Heatsink,' and the company claims the design brings 50% greater heatsink surface area over previous RX 400/500 series cards. So it would seem it's an iteration on the Unibody VRM Heatsink introduced by RX RS and GTR series cards.

As silly as the 'Fatboy' name may be, it seems to have done its marketing job by raising interest, critical or otherwise, and for a subdued Polaris refresh SKU, that extra differentiation can be helpful.

And in terms of 'fatness', the RX 590 Fatboy has the 2.5 slot Double Dissapation style cooler, leading up to a height of 2.09". Thick, but perhaps not as thick as the Red Devil, which stands at 2.24". In any case, the card is neatly clad in an aluminum backplate. Right next to the PCIe power connections is the BIOS dip switch, toggling between Performance and Quiet/Lower RPM.

The display output situation is fairly standard for both cards, with 3 DisplayPorts, 1 HDMI, and 1 DL-DVI-D port.

PowerColor Red Devil Radeon RX 590

For the Red Devil RX 590, the thermal solution doesn't appear unchanged from the RX 580 version, sharing the same dimensions, 4x8mm + 1x6mm heatpipes, 6+1 power phases, and DrMos. At 10" long but 2.24" (57mm) high, the Red Devil RX 590 is a particuarly squat but thick card - just 3mm away from the standard triple-slot width. So prospective buyers should keep that in mind for smaller form factors, occupied neighboring PCIe slots, or chassis airflow management.

While the card has the red Red Devil LED, one of the more easily overlooked features is a small dip switch to disable LEDs. Both BIOS and LED switches are labelled so on the pentagram-emblazoned 1.5mm metal backplate.

Both the XFX Fatboy and PowerColor Red Devil have zero dB fan functionality as well, turning off the fans under certain temperatures and lighter workloads.

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  • rtho782 - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    So, a 16% increase in price since June 2016, 30 months ago, gets us 22% higher clocks with the same memory bandwidth, and 50% more power consumption.

    I'm not very excited by this for some reason.
  • Galcobar - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    It's likely a reference to the Harley-Davidson Fatboy, which is a big cruiser even by HW standards. Probably hoping to capitalize on its continuing media presence in such productions as Sons of Anarchy and Terminator Genisys (not so much Wild Hogs).
  • Galcobar - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    Bother, replied to the wrong comment...
  • Dr. Swag - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    Who in the world thought xfx fatboy was a good gpu name?!?

    "Hey I was thinking of buying the fatboy."

    "Dude the fatboy actually runs pretty cool."

    Seriously wtf is that name?
  • plonk420 - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    it would have been an amazingly awesome promo if Fallout 76 came with it...
  • PeachNCream - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    Yes, that's some awful branding and who knows how that one found its way onto a retail box. The name on the box doesn't mean anything in relationship to the card's performance, but someone over at XFX was smoking something good and someone else was asleep at the approval button helm.
  • ianmills - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    If we think of electricity as food I think fatboy is a great name for the 590!
  • PeachNCream - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    Hah, that's a good (and funny) point!
  • Galcobar - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    It's likely a reference to the Harley-Davidson Fatboy, which is a big cruiser even by HW standards. Probably hoping to capitalize on its continuing media presence in such productions as Sons of Anarchy and Terminator Genisys (not so much Wild Hogs).
  • PeachNCream - Thursday, November 15, 2018 - link

    It seems derogatory in any case, as if a clever way to toss out an insult in the general direction of the customers. As for media presence, I don't know. I've heard of Terminator movies before, but haven't seen anything past the second movie. Sons of Anarchy, I think is a cable TV series IIRC, but not as many people pay attention to television. For instance, I haven't even owned a television in the last 18 years and don't bother with streaming media aside from the occasional YouTube clip. It seems that aside from the very old, that's more the norm than the exception. As well, I think those big motorcycles aren't very popular either. Isn't the company that sells them in a little financial trouble these days?

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