Crimson Performance

Last but certainly not least, let’s talk about performance improvements. Like the Omega driver before it, Crimson comes with a collection of performance improvements from AMD’s new driver branch. To preface this with caution, I don’t think anyone should be expecting massive system-wide performance gains – that’s all low-hanging fruit AMD picked long ago – but there’s plenty of room for some lesser optimizations along with game-specific optimizations.

AMD’s own numbers point to game-specific improvements of up to 20%, though it should be noted that AMD’s best-case numbers are on unreleased/beta games that have yet to be well-optimized in the first place. Otherwise AMD’s own numbers are far more tame, listing recently released games with gains between three and five percent.

To take a quick look at general performance, we went ahead and ran our GPU benchmark suite at 2560x1440 on our Radeon R9 Fury (vanilla), comparing the previous Catalyst 15.11.1 beta to the new Radeon Software Crimson 15.11 beta. The Fury and its underlying Fiji GPU is the newest product out of AMD, so it offers AMD the best opportunity to unlock any remaining performance in the architecture.

Radeon R9 Fury Driver Performance: Crimson 15.11 vs. Catalyst 15.11.1

Overall the average performance gain at 2560x1440 is just 1%. There are a couple of instances where there are small-but-consistent performance gains – Grand Theft Auto V and Grid: Autosport stand out here – but otherwise the performance in our other games is within the margin of error, plus or minus. Not that we were expecting anything different as this never was pitched as a golden driver,  but this does make it clear that more significant performance gains are going be on a per-game basis.

Final Thoughts

Wrapping things up, AMD’s development structure in the past year and going forward is one that has both been beneficial to the company and has brought with it its own drawbacks. By focusing feature releases around the end of the year driver, AMD is able to cut down on what parts of the driver they change (and thereby can possibly break) at other times of the year, and try to knock out all of their feature-related bugs at once. At the same time it makes the annual driver release a significant event, as AMD releases a number of new features all at once. However on the other hand this means that AMD has few features launching any other time of the year, which can make it look like they’re not heavily invested in feature development at those points. Then of course there’s the WHQL element, where for multiple reasons AMD hasn’t issued very many WHQL releases this year, and is something they’re seeking to change in 2016.

Looking under the hood there’s no single feature that’s going to blow every Radeon user away at once, but overall there are a number of neat features here that should be welcomed by various user groups. The Freesync Low Framerate Compensation changes should be of particular interest to Freesync users, while shader caching will improve shader loading performance across the board. Otherwise smaller fixes like the DirectX 9 improvements to CrossFire frame pacing, CrossFire Freesync, and framerate target control should be welcome news to APU and dual graphics users.

Meanwhile AMD’s radical overhaul of their control panel via the new Radeon Settings application will be quickly noticed by everyone. Though there’s plenty of room for interpretation on style and just how a good control panel is laid out, AMD has clearly put a lot of effort into cleaning up the layout of their control panel and it shows, as important options are no longer buried under multiple layers of menu trees. And on the performance front Radeon Settings is faster than Catalyst Control Center even on fast machines, and though we haven’t spent much time on covering it, AMD has also managed to speed up the installation process while they were at it. So all-told the Crimson release has something for everyone.

Ultimately I hesitate to ascribe too much of this to the Radeon Technologies Group too soon – this project has clearly been in the works longer than 3 months – but at the same time this is the RTG making their mark. It’s a new direction for AMD’s graphics group and a new look to match. And if the RTG can meet their stability, performance, and release goals going forward with the new Crimson driver, then they should be able to make 2016 a good year for the Radeon user base.

Radeon Settings: The New Face of AMD’s Drivers
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  • LeoKesler - Tuesday, November 24, 2015 - link

    New interface, same bugs. The players of Elite Dangerous still have the same AMD bug for months and AMD dont fix it.

    56 pages of angry players:
    https://forums.frontier.co.uk/showthread.php?t=170...
  • looncraz - Tuesday, November 24, 2015 - link

    There are forums like that for nVidia bugs as well.
  • K_Space - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    That shouldn't be an excuse for AMD as two wrongs don't make a right. But they're not making excuses: they made it clear they have bug reporting forum (that would not be the above link), and as HardStyleFlavor suggested, its best if players submit a ticket there. My understanding the interim solution is to install Win 8.1 drivers as these seem to resolve the encountered issue -for now-.
  • lordken - Tuesday, November 24, 2015 - link

    personally I don't like new UI but it is matter of taste and I think most ppl like it, so don't care much. Most important that they work up on driver itself.

    However it is a bit shame they didn't manage to fix overclocking bug (at least on HD7950) while having GPU accelerated video playback. Reported in 15.9 and now again, hopefully they fix it.
    I wonder if it is only 7900/7950 related issue (or my card) or general one but didn't find anyone else on google so could be quite rare bug...
    If you are bored can you test it and reply me with your gpu if bug occurs?
    1. OC your gpu beyond default clock , run gpu-z (to monitor gpu clock)
    2. have some gpu accelerated video to play (ie youtube clip in your browser, with gpu accelration)
    3. run any game to tax your gpu and check clocks in gpuz to see if they go over default clock or not
    In my case it never goes over default clock even if gpu load is 100% , when video playback app is not running clocks goes up as expected.
  • hat1324 - Wednesday, November 25, 2015 - link

    This is an issue with all Tahitis as far as I know. My R9 280X does this as well, something to do with the card forcing low VRAM clocks when UVD is enabled.

    The work-around is to run at 60Hz single monitor, turn off powerplay and ULPS, or don't overclock memory

    However, with Crimson we can finally set application OC profiles, so that's the way to go about things now
  • Glenn37216 - Tuesday, November 24, 2015 - link

    Finally , we get decent drivers in Crossfire for Dx 9 titles. Took long enough. But as an AMD USER and Nvidia user , I know for a fact AMD is still far behind Nvidia in the gpu game. Nvidia Games with Physx , Gamework Enhancements are far surpassed what AMD has to offer. AMD needs and ANSWER to these techs to stay on par with Nvidia. After playing games like Warframe , Mafia 2 , Batman AK with physx , I made a harsh decision to sell off my 10 or so AMD cards and stay strictly with Nvidia. If I wanted to dumb down my graphics.... .. I'd stick to console gaming .

    http://www.3dmark.com/compare/fs/6431022/fs/346680...
  • Dalamar6 - Thursday, November 26, 2015 - link

    As much as I like to rag on AMD for being a joke, physx is just another proprietary gimmick, and actually hurts the general consumers.

    Remember kids, proprietary/exclusive is bad.
    Standards, Linux and open source good.
  • Dalamar6 - Thursday, November 26, 2015 - link

    **unlike nvidia, AMD has actually contributed something meaningful and standards based in the form of Vulkan, though it's not like it'll matter when all the stupid devs keep using garbage like DX/Windows. -_-

    If physx was not proprietary, and standards based, then we can talk...:rolleyes:
  • Fanatical Meat - Tuesday, November 24, 2015 - link

    They're still packaging that gaming evolved app crapware in the driver package. remember to check what is being installed.
  • Oxford Guy - Thursday, November 26, 2015 - link

    failworks?

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