Preparing to close out a major month of announcements for AMD – and to open the door to the next era of architectures across the company – AMD wrapped up its final keynote presentation of the month by announcing their Radeon RX 6000 series of video cards. Hosted once more by AMD CEO Dr. Lisa Su, AMD’s hour-long keynote revealed the first three parts in AMD’s new RDNA2 architecture video card family: the Radeon RX 6800, 6800 XT, and 6900 XT. The core of AMD’s new high-end video card lineup, AMD means to do battle with the best of the best out of arch-rival NVIDIA. And we’ll get to see first-hand if AMD can retake the high-end market on November 18th, when the first two cards hit retail shelves.

AMD’s forthcoming video card launch has been a long time coming for the company, and one they’ve been teasing particularly heavily. For AMD, the Radeon RX 6000 series represents the culmination of efforts from across the company as everyone from the GPU architecture team and the semi-custom SoC team to the Zen CPU team has played a role in developing AMD’s latest GPU technology. All the while, these new cards are AMD’s best chance in at least half a decade to finally catch up to NVIDIA at the high-end of the video card market. So understandably, the company is jazzed – and in more than just a marketing manner – about what the RX 6000 means.

Anchoring the new cards is AMD’s RDNA2 GPU architecture. RDNA2 is launching near-simultaneously across consoles and PC video cards next month, where it will be the backbone of some 200 million video game consoles plus countless AMD GPUs and APUs to come. Accordingly, AMD has pulled out all of the stops in designing it, assembling an architecture that’s on the cutting-edge of technical features like ray tracing and DirectX 12 Ultimate support, all the while leveraging the many things they’ve learned from their successful Zen CPU architectures to maximize RDNA2’s performance. RDNA2 is also rare in that it isn’t being built on a new manufacturing process, so coming from AMD’s earlier RDNA (1) architecture and associated video cards, AMD is relying on architectural improvements to deliver virtually all of their performance gains. Truly, it’s AMD’s RDNA2 architecture that’s going to make or break their new cards.

Over the coming months, RDNA2 will filter down into an increasing number of AMD chip designs. But for now, in the PC space, AMD is starting with enthusiast-level video cards. The first RDNA2 GPU out of the works is Navi 21 – AKA “Big Navi” – which AMD will be using as the basis of a trio of video cards. These are the Radeon RX 6900 XT, 6800 XT, and 6800 respectively. With these latest cards, AMD is aiming squarely at NVIDIA’s recently-launched GeForce RTX 30-series lineup, aiming to meet (or beat) the RTX 3090, 3080, and 3070 respectively. Suffice it to say, AMD hasn’t been able to match NVIDIA’s top cards for several years now, so these are very bold claims from a company that has re-learned how to become very bold in the last five years.

AMD Radeon RX Series Specification Comparison
  AMD Radeon RX 6900 XT AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT AMD Radeon RX 6800 AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT
Stream Processors 5120?
(80 CUs)
4608?
(72 CUs)
3840
(60 CUs)
2560
(40 CUs)
ROPs 128 128 96 64
Game Clock 2015MHz 2015MHz 1815MHz 1755MHz
Boost Clock 2250MHz 2250MHz 2105MHz 1905MHz
Throughput (FP32) 20.6 TFLOPs 18.6 TFLOPs 13.9 TFLOPs 9.75 TFLOPs
Memory Clock 16 Gbps GDDR6 16 Gbps GDDR6 16 Gbps GDDR6 14 Gbps GDDR6
Memory Bus Width 256-bit 256-bit 256-bit 256-bit
VRAM 16GB 16GB 16GB 8GB
Infinity Cache 128MB 128MB 128MB N/A
Total Board Power 300W 300W 250W 225W
Manufacturing Process TSMC 7nm TSMC 7nm TSMC 7nm TSMC 7nm
Transistor Count 26.8B 26.8B 26.8B 10.3B
Architecture RDNA2 RDNA2 RDNA2 RDNA (1)
GPU Navi 21 Navi 21 Navi 21 Navi 10
Launch Date 12/08/2020 11/18/2020 11/18/2020 07/07/2019
Launch Price $999 $649 $579 $399

As today’s announcement is not a full tech deep dive – like the Zen 3 announcement, the deep dive will come closer to launch – AMD is only sharing some high-level specifications of the new cards. But with information on the number of CUs, memory support, and power consumption now in hand, we have a good idea of what AMD is bringing to the table, and why they believe the RX 6000 series will once again make them fully-competitive at the high-end.

Radeon RX 6900 XT

Amongst AMD’s video card stack, the company is taking a very similar tack as NVIDIA. So although the RX 6900 XT is technically their flagship part, at $999 it's still in a similar “more money than sense” category as the RTX 3090 – which is to say that AMD is looking to charge a good premium for the card. Since it’s based on a fully-enabled (and undoubtedly heavily binned) Navi 21 GPU, it’s the hardest part for AMD to produce, and thus the rarest. How rare remains to be seen, but as Navi 21 is undoubtedly a large chip thanks to the 26.8 billion transistors housing 80 CUs and 128MB Infinity Cache (more on that later), I don’t expect AMD to be flooding the market with 6900 XTs any time soon.

At any rate, the card will be the full Navi 21 experience. All 80CUs will be enabled, and thanks to AMD’s efforts in optimizing the RDNA2 architecture for clockspeeds, it will have a game clock of 2015MHz and a peak turbo clock (boost clock) of 2250MHz. Assuming that AMD hasn’t done anything too crazy with the RDNA2 architecture, this means that the card will have an average FP32 shader throughput of around 20.6 TFLOPS, more than double the throughput of the RX 5700 XT – and right in line with AMD’s goals to double their performance over the RX 5000 series.

On the memory side of matters the card comes with 16GB of GDDR6. AMD is not officially disclosing the memory clockspeed, but based on current tech trends we’re expecting that GDDR6 to be running at 16 Gbps/pin (which AMD has since confirmed). Meanwhile, based on other AMD slides, it looks like this memory is attached to a 256-bit memory bus, which would give the card a total memory bandwidth of 512GB/sec. This is admittedly a bit anemic for a flagship video card, and is where AMD’s new Infinity Cache technology will come into play.

Finally, AMD says that the card will have a Total Board Power (TBP) of 300W. At a time when ASIC designers everywhere are struggling to keep power consumption in check – and when even NVIDIA’s top cards now hit 350W – a 300W TBP is a significant claim. Not only is it potentially a competitive advantage for AMD, but it means they haven’t needed to increase their TBP versus their previous high-end card, the also 7nm-based Radeon VII.

With all of that said, however, some expectation management is in order. Although AMD is comparing the RX 6900 XT to NVIDIA’s RTX 3090, there are a few potential gotchas involved. We’ll break down AMD’s specific performance claims and benchmark slides later, but suffice it to say and as AMD is pitching things now, if the RX 6900 XT can match the 3090, it’s going to be at the very top edge of the AMD card’s performance profile, overclocking included. Which would go hand-in-hand with the heavy binning mentioned earlier.

Radeon RX 6800 XT

Moving down the line we have the Radeon RX 6800 XT. Based on a slightly cut-down Navi 21 GPU, this is the AMD card that mere mortals can afford. At $650 it’s still expensive, to say the least, but significantly less so than the $1000 6900 XT.

Out of the box, the RX 6800 XT comes with 72 CUs enabled. Combined with clockspeeds identical to the RX 6900 XT – a game clock of 2015MHz and a boost clock of 2250MHz – and pending additional technical details from AMD, the card should average around 18.6 TFLOPS of FP32 shader performance. Relative to the RX 5700, this is just under 2x the performance of AMD’s last-gen leading card.

Other than the reduction in CUs, according to AMD’s specifications there are no other notable differences between the RX 6800 XT and RX 6900 XT. The more affordable card still comes with 16GB of GDDR6 memory, and I expect it’ll be clocked at 16 Gbps/pin as well, giving it an expected total bandwidth of 512GB/sec. Augmenting this, like all of today’s cards, will be 128MB of AMD’s Infinity Cache. Meanwhile the card’s TBP carries the same 300W rating as the 6900 XT as well.

AMD is positioning this card directly against NVIDIA’s RTX 3080; and unlike the 6900 XT, there are no asterisks to speak of here. So if AMD can deliver on their claims, then this 6800 XT will be doing so right out of the box. In which case, meeting the 3080 in performance and possibly beating it in power consumption would be a big win for AMD and the RDNA2 architecture, and a sign of how far they’ve come in the last few years.

Overall, given AMD’s performance expectations and pricing, along with the expected competition, it’s unsurprising that AMD led with this card today for the Radeon keynote. It’s technically not the flagship, but like the RTX 3080 on NVIDIA’s side, it’s going to be the card that garners the most attention.

Radeon RX 6800

It will be the final card in AMD’s new product stack, however, that will garner the most in sales. Rounding out the Navi 21 trio of cards we have the Radeon RX 6800, a further cut-down Navi 21 part that trades off a drop in performance for lower power consumption and a cheaper $579 price.

The RX 6800 will ship with 60 CUs (3 shader engines) enabled, and with the fourth shader engine disabled, this by and large makes it three-quarters of a full Navi 21. Relative to the other cards, clockspeeds are going to be lower, with a game clock of 1815MHz and a boost clock of 2105MHz. Which, per our math, would give the card 13.9 TFLOPS of FP32 shader performance, or around 75% of the shader performance of the RX 6800 XT.

Surprisingly, AMD isn’t dialing back their memory configuration here. Despite being the third and most budget-friendly card in the stack, the vanilla RX 6800 still ships with 16GB of GDDR6 memory. And while I suspect AMD will go with cheaper 14Gbps memory here – giving the card 448GB/sec of bandwidth – that’s still a lot of memory overall. Similarly, AMD isn't using lower-clocked memory either; even the RX 6800 gets the same top-tier 16 Gbps/pin memory (and resulting 512GB/sec of memory bandwidth) that the other cards are getting. Furthermore the complete 128MB Infinity Cache will be available as well, so the GPU itself still has a full pool of its fastest local memory on-hand.

Typical for lower-tier cards, the RX 6800 also carries a lower TBP rating of 250W, 50W less than the RX 6800 XT. AMD of course is no stranger to offering high-powered cards, but in some respects the RX 6800 is going to be the most interesting of the bunch, as it’s going to be our first chance to look at what RDNA2 can do at a more reasonable TBP.

For the moment, AMD is classifying the RX 6800’s performance relative to NVIDIA’s RTX 2080 Ti. In reality this is card that will (roughly) compete with the RTX 3070 – the same card that replaced the RTX 2080 Ti – but as RTX 3070 doesn’t launch until tomorrow, AMD doesn’t have a card that they draw apples-to-apples comparisons against. So for the moment, AMD is instead playing with the transitive property of equality.

With AMD’s own launch not coming until November 18th, there’s still plenty of time for AMD to frame this card’s performance with respect to the RTX 3070, so it will be interesting to see what (if anything) they have to say in a week’s time. AMD’s promotional material places the RX 6800 ahead of the RTX 2080 Ti, but we’ll see if that holds true for the RTX 3070 as well. For now, AMD seems very confident that they're going to beat NVIDIA's cheapest RTX-30 series card, and with a projected performance and VRAM capacity lead they've priced it accordingly at $579.

One other curiosity on positioning is that AMD is also promoting the RX 6800 as a 4K gaming card, just like its more powerful siblings. Working to the card’s advantage, its 16GB of VRAM means that it has plenty of memory to handle the larger buffers that come with the higher resolution. However as the card only has 75% of the RX 6800 XT’s theoretical shader performance, I do wonder whether it’s going to be outright fast enough for 4K over the long run. Current-generation games should be very doable, judging from what the RTX 3080 and RTX 2080 Ti can do, however there’s a bit more concern over the long run as game developers switch to the next-gen consoles as their performance and feature baselines. In which case, the RX 6800 will instead be AMD’s 1440p gaming king, and fittingly the company has published some 1440p performance slides for the card alongside the 4K performance slides.

Overall, AMD some very ambitious performance goals for the Radeon RX 6000 series of cards. At this point AMD knows exactly what kind of performance they need to deliver to take on NVIDIA for the high-end, and the company believes that the Navi 21 GPU they’ve built is just the tool to do that. Now with 3 weeks to go until the first RX 6800 series cards launch, it’s just a matter of time until we can see first-hand whether AMD can deliver on those ambitious, RDNA2-fueled promises.

RDNA2 At A High Level: Ray Tracing, Infinity Cache, & A Whole Lot of Clockspeed
Comments Locked

274 Comments

View All Comments

  • inighthawki - Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - link

    Bear in mind the game is often not the only thing running on the system. You will also have the desktop compositor running at all times, plus apps like browsers (which are commonly run fullscreen). a double buffered swapchain in 8K is a minimum of 256MB *each*, so you can easily consume a few gigabytes just by having a handful of apps open.
  • vladx - Thursday, October 29, 2020 - link

    That completely false, otherwise you wouldn't be able to have more than 4-5 applications opened a decade ago when GPUs maxed at 512MB VRAM.
  • inighthawki - Friday, October 30, 2020 - link

    It is not, you simply chose to infer something I didn't say - namely that such a scenario wouldn't work at all.

    Video memory is virtualized and placed in system memory when there is pressure in VRAM. You just get less performance when it's there. Running on those 512MB GPUs is more than doable, but you'll see noticeable performance deltas. While different under the hood (i.e. the memory is still directly accessible, albeit at much slower bandwidth), conceptually it's quite analogous the old days when people didn't have a lot of RAM, and your computer slowed down as you needed to constantly page in data from the page file.

    Try running an 8K display on a 1GB GPU and let me know how it works out for you after you start actually running more than one app on it at a time.
  • Tams80 - Sunday, November 1, 2020 - link

    Games were less demanding then, and actually you couldn't run that many applications simultaneously without experiencing slowdowns.

    Just look up "ways to speed up your PC" from that time. One of the main recommendations was to close any unwanted applications.

    It's only relatively recently that not worrying about what applications are open when doing something intensive (and applications for all sorts of different things) has become the norm. Hell, I still close many applications before launching a game or video editor out of habit.
  • Thanny - Friday, October 30, 2020 - link

    A 4K frame buffer is 32MB.

    That's not what takes up the memory at higher resolutions. Various kinds of processing require a certain amount of memory per pixel to do. When you quadruple or double the number of pixels, memory requirements can go up by quite a bit.
  • Dug - Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - link

    I hope driver improvements come through.
    They are so broken, especially for emulation.
  • twtech - Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - link

    It's not clear why the author thinks the 6800 would be favored over the 6800 XT - it looks like it offers 75% of the performance, for 90% of the price. The 6800 XT is actually the better value in terms of performance-per-dollar, and neither of the cards are cheap.

    If you're going to spend over $500 either way, you might as well get the card that is quite a bit faster.
  • Intel999 - Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - link

    The 6800 is 16% more expensive than the 3070 with up to 18% better performance. In the real world you will probably not find a 3070 at $499 for six months. Assuming you can find one to begin with.

    AMD will sell all the 6800s they can produce with good margins too. Actually they will sell all the 6900xts and 6800xts too.

    There is no way AMD forecasted with the almost zero availability of Ampere in mind. With their shortage of wafers that are being spread thin by a current shortage of Renoir and the planned uptick in EPYC rollout they don't have spare wafers to just throw at higher production of NAVI2.

    There will most likely be long periods of out of stock situations for these cards for the next six months. Actually because of demand well above AMD's projections.

    It should now be apparent as to why Nvidia launched Ampere prematurely. Their insiders leaked the fact that AMD was going to match them in performance at the top end. Using less energy too.

    After all, wasn't efficiency a Nvidia talking point ever since the 290X was the performance king?
  • Spunjji - Thursday, October 29, 2020 - link

    Efficiency has always been an Nvidia talking point when they're good at it, and for the rest of the time it's "we have the fastest card". Never seen so many fanboys swivel their heads so fast as when Nvidia switch position on that metric.

    You're probably right about availability, though. It's going to suck for everyone for months.
  • TheJian - Wednesday, October 28, 2020 - link

    Too bad, missed an opportunity to really tank NV here with 830mm^2 reticle limit while NV stuck at 628 on samsung. Your cards would be $1600+ and BEATING NV in everything, but you chose to lose. AGAIN. Bummer. You were even on the 2nd use here at 7nm so not even as risky as huge on new process. DUMB. Still chasing "good enough" instead of KINGS. You are 50w less because you are losing to a larger die. I'd be impressed at 50w less and WINNING.

    What's a 68000 card? Fix that headline? AMD reveals a 68000? :) For a second I was excited about a massive card...LOL. But can't be bothered to read the 2nd page now.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now