Today’s Review: Radeon R9 Fury X

Now that we’ve had a chance to cover all of the architectural and design aspirations of the Fiji GPU and its constituting cards, let’s get down to the business end of this article: the product we’ll be reviewing today.

Having launched last week and being reviewed today is AMD’s Radeon R9 Fury X, the company’s new flagship single-GPU video card. Featuring a fully enabled Fiji GPU, the R9 Fury X is Fiji at its finest, and a safe bet to be the grandest video card AMD releases built on TSMC’s 28nm process. Fiji is clocked high, cooled with overkill, and priced to go right up against the only GM200 GeForce card from NVIDIA that anyone cares about: the GeForce GTX 980 Ti.

AMD GPU Specification Comparison
  AMD Radeon R9 Fury X AMD Radeon R9 Fury AMD Radeon R9 290X AMD Radeon R9 290
Stream Processors 4096 (Fewer) 2816 2560
Texture Units 256 (How much) 176 160
ROPs 64 (Depnds) 64 64
Boost Clock 1050MHz (On Yields) 1000MHz 947MHz
Memory Clock 1Gbps HBM (Memory Too) 5Gbps GDDR5 5Gbps GDDR5
Memory Bus Width 4096-bit 4096-bit 512-bit 512-bit
VRAM 4GB 4GB 4GB 4GB
FP64 1/16 1/16 1/8 1/8
TrueAudio Y Y Y Y
Transistor Count 8.9B 8.9B 6.2B 6.2B
Typical Board Power 275W (High) 250W 250W
Manufacturing Process TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm TSMC 28nm
Architecture GCN 1.2 GCN 1.2 GCN 1.1 GCN 1.1
GPU Fiji Fiji Hawaii Hawaii
Launch Date 06/24/15 07/14/15 10/24/13 11/05/13
Launch Price $649 $549 $549 $399

With a maximum boost clockspeed of 1050MHz and with 4096 SPs organized into 64 CUs, R9 Fury X has been designed to deliver more shading/compute performance than ever before. Hawaii by comparison topped out at 2816 SPs (44 CUs), giving R9 Fury X a 1280 SP (~45%) advantage in raw shading hardware. Meanwhile as a result of scaling up the number of CUs, the number of texture units has also scaled up to 256 texture units, a new high-water mark for the number of texture units in a single GPU from any vendor.

Getting away from the CUs for a second, the R9 Fury X features less dramatic changes at its front-end and back-end relative to Hawaii. Like Hawaii, R9 Fury X features 4 geometry engines on the front-end and 64 ROPs on the back-end, so from a theoretical standpoint Fiji does not have any additional resources to work with on those portions of the rendering pipeline. That said, what the raw specifications do not cover are the architectural optimizations we have covered in past pages, which should see Fiji’s ROPs and geometry engines both perform better per unit and per clock than Hawaii’s. Meanwhile the other significant influence here is the extensive memory bandwidth enabled by using High Bandwidth Memory, which combined with a larger 2MB L2 cache should leave the ROPs far better fed on R9 Fury X than it did on AMD’s Hawaii cards.

As for High Bandwidth Memory, the next-generation memory technology gives AMD more memory bandwidth than ever before. Featuring an ultra-wide 4096-bit memory bus clocked at 1Gbps (500MHz DDR), the R9 Fury X has a whopping 512GB/sec of memory bandwidth, fed by 4GB of HBM organized in 4 stacks of 1GB each. Relative to R9 290X, this represents a 60% increase in memory bandwidth, a true generational jump that we will not see again in an AMD GPU for some number of years to come.

Consequently the performance expectations for R9 Fury X will significantly vary with the nature of the rendering workload. For pure compute workloads, between the 45% increase in SPs and 5% clockspeed increase, R9 Fury X will be up to 53% faster than the R9 290X. Meanwhile for ROP-bound scenarios the difference can be anywhere between 5% and 120%, depending on how bandwidth-bound the task is and how effective delta compression is in shrinking the bandwidth requirements. Real world expectations are 30-40% over R9 290X, depending on the game and the resolution, with R9 Fury X extending its gains at higher resolutions.

For AMD, the Radeon R9 Fury X is a critically important card for a number of reasons. From a technology perspective this is the very first HBM card, and consequently the missteps AMD makes and the lessons they learn here will be important for future generation of cards. At the same time from a competitive perspective, the importance of a flagship cannot be ignored. While flagship card sales are only a tiny part of overall card sales for NVIDIA and AMD, the PC video card industry is (in)famous for its window shopping and the emphasis put on which card holds the performance crown. Most buyers cannot (or will not) buy a card like R9 Fury X, but the sales impact of holding the crown is undeniable, as buyers as a whole will favor whoever can hold the crown. After seeing their consumer discrete market share fall to the lowest level in years, AMD is gunning to get the crown back, and the halo effect that comes from it that spurs on so many additional sales of lower-end cards.

The competition for the R9 Fury X is of course NVIDIA’s recently released GeForce GTX 980 Ti. Based on a cut-down version of NVIDIA’s GM200 GPU, the GTX 980 Ti is an odd card that comes entirely too close to their official flagship GTX Titan X in performance (~95%), to the point where although the GTX Titan X is the de jure flagship for NVIDIA, it is the GTX 980 Ti that is the de facto flagship for the company. Meanwhile, although only NVIDIA knows for sure, given the timing of the GTX 980 Ti’s launch, there is every reason to believe that the company launched it with the specific intent of countering the R9 Fury X before it even launched, so AMD does not enjoy a first-mover advantage here.

Price-wise the R9 Fury X has launched at $649, the same price as the GTX 980 Ti, so between these two cards this is a straight-up fist fight. There is no price spoiler effect in play here, the question simply comes down to which card is the better card. The only advantage for either party in this case is that NVIDIA is offering a free copy of Batman: Arkham Knight with GTX 980 Ti cards, not that the PC port of the game is an asset at this time given its poor state.

Finally, as far as launch quantities are concerned, AMD has declined to comment on how many R9 Fury X cards were available for launch. What we do know is that the cards sold out on the first day and we have yet to see a massive restocking take place yet, though at just a week post-launch restocks typically don’t come quite this soon. In any case whether due to demand, supply, or a mix of the two, the initial launch allocations of R9 Fury X did sell out, and for the moment getting another card is easier said than done.

Summer 2015 GPU Pricing Comparison
AMD Price NVIDIA
Radeon R9 Fury X $649 GeForce GTX 980 Ti
  $499 GeForce GTX 980
Radeon R9 390X $429  
Radeon R9 290X
Radeon R9 390
$329 GeForce GTX 970
Radeon R9 290 $250  
Radeon R9 380 $200 GeFroce GTX 960
Radeon R7 370
Radeon R9 270
$150  
  $130 GeForce GTX 750 Ti
Radeon R7 360 $110  
The Four Faces of Fiji, & Quantum Too Meet The Radeon R9 Fury X
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  • testbug00 - Sunday, July 5, 2015 - link

    You don't need architecture improvements to use DX12/Vulkan/etc. The APIs merely allow you to implement them over DX11 if you choose to. You can write a DX12 game without optimizing for any GPUs (although, not doing so for GCN given consoles are GCN would be a tad silly).

    If developers are aiming to put low level stuff in whenever they can than the issue becomes that due to AMD's "GCN everywhere" approach developers may just start coding for PS4, porting that code to Xbox DX12 and than porting that to PC with higher textures/better shadows/effects. In which Nvidia could take massive performance deficites to AMD due to not getting the same amount of extra performance from DX12.

    Don't see that happening in the next 5 years. At least, not with most games that are console+PC and need huge performance. You may see it in a lot of Indie/small studio cross platform games however.
  • RG1975 - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    AMD is getting there but, they still have a little bit to go to bring us a new "9700 Pro". That card devastated all Nvidia cards back then. That's what I'm waiting for to come from AMD before I switch back.
  • Thatguy97 - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    would you say amd is now the "geforce fx 5800"
  • piroroadkill - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    Everyone who bought a Geforce FX card should feel bad, because the AMD offerings were massively better. But now AMD is close to NVIDIA, it's still time to rag on AMD, huh?

    That said, of course if I had $650 to spend, you bet your ass I'd buy a 980 Ti.
  • Thatguy97 - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    oh believe me i remember they felt bad lol but im not ragging on amd but nvidia stole their thunder with the 980 ti
  • KateH - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    C'mon, Fury isn't even close to the Geforce FX level of fail. It's really hard to overstate how bad the FX5800 was, compared to the Radeon 9700 and even the Geforce 4600Ti.

    The Fury X wins some 4K benchmarks, the 980Ti wins some. The 980Ti uses a bit less power but the Fury X is cooler and quieter.

    Geforce FX level of fail would be if the Fury X was released 3 months from now to go up against the 980Ti with 390X levels of performance and an air cooler.
  • Thatguy97 - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    To be fair the 5950 ultra was actually decent
  • Morawka - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    your understating nvidia's scores.. the won 90% of all benchmarks, not just "some". a full 120W more power under furmark load and they are using HBM!!
  • looncraz - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    Furmark power load means nothing, it is just a good way to stress test and see how much power the GPU is capable of pulling in a worst-case scenario and how it behaves in that scenario.

    While gaming, the difference is miniscule and no one will care one bit.

    Also, they didn't win 90% of the benchmarks at 4K, though they certainly did at 1440. However, the real world isn't that simple. A 10% performance difference in GPUs may as well be zero difference, there are pretty much no game features which only require a 10% higher performance GPU to use... or even 15%.

    As for the value argument, I'd say they are about even. The Fury X will run cooler and quieter, take up less space, and will undoubtedly improve to parity or beyond the 980Ti in performance with driver updates. For a number of reasons, the Fury X should actually age better, as well. But that really only matters for people who keep their cards for three years or more (which most people usually do). The 980Ti has a RAM capacity advantage and an excellent - and known - overclocking capacity and currently performs unnoticeably better.

    I'd also expect two Fury X cards to outperform two 980Ti cards with XFire currently having better scaling than SLI.
  • chizow - Thursday, July 2, 2015 - link

    The differences in minimums aren't miniscule at all, and you also seem to be discounting the fact 980Ti overclocks much better than Fury X. Sure XDMA CF scales better when it works, but AMD has shown time and again, they're completely unreliable for timely CF fixes for popular games to the point CF is clearly a negative for them right now.

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