Curated by THEOUTPOST
On Tue, 7 Jan, 12:05 AM UTC
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[1]
CES 2025: AMD Shares First Look at Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 RDNA 4 GPUs
FSR 4 will be available on games that support FSR 3,1 with Black Ops 6 receiving it later this year. AMD took over CES 2025 on its second day. The American chip maker talked about its ambitions of dominating the laptop gaming segment, but that doesn't mean there isn't much in store for desktop gamers. AMD talked about their new upcoming CPUs, and they have also shared info on their new RDNA 4-based Radeon RX 9070 series of graphics cards. These will include the RX 9070 XT and the RX 9070. These are based on the new 4nm RDNA 4 architecture and feature the FSR 4 upscaling and frame generation technology. The new FSR 4 tech will utilize the dedicated AI accelerators introduced with the RDNA 4 technology. This means that, as of now, FSR 4 will be exclusive to the new 9070 XT and 9070 GPUs. But it will be available on games that currently support FSR 3.1 with the support for the new standard coming later on. Matt Booty, president of game content and studios at Microsoft, mentioned that Black Ops 6 will get support for FSR 4 later this year. However, we didn't get to hear much about the GPU hardware and its specs at the keynote. AMD didn't mention how these new graphics cards compare to other competition in the market or how the new FSR 4 compares to Nvidia's DLSS frame generation. But, they have promised that more details will come out with the release of these cards in the first quarter of 2025. For those of you confused about why the jump from 7000 directly to 9000, that's because the 8000 series will be reserved for laptop GPU using RDNA 3.5 architecture. AMD is also introducing new AI functionalities to their Adrenalin software, which will allow image generation, summarization, and use of AMD chatbot about graphical settings. I am quite hopeful that FSR 4 will bring several improvements over what we have currently. But the exact numbers will be revealed later on. I wish they showed some comparisons at the keynote, but it could be because they want to do further testing before making any claims. That said, what are your hopes for the new 9000 series? Let us know in the comments below.
[2]
AMD Just Revealed the Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 GPUs
It's been a couple of years since the last time we got a new generation of GPUs. Intel got the ball rolling with its second-gen Arc cards, which means it's time for NVIDIA and AMD to make a move themselves. AMD is unveiling its range of RDNA 4 GPUs, starting with the Radeon RX 9070 and the RX 9070 XT. ✕ Remove Ads AMD just unveiled the Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 GPUs during CES 2025, the very first graphics cards making use of the RDNA 4 architecture. The RDNA 4 architecture is, according to AMD, a ground-up redesign, boasting "a significant boost in AI," optimized compute units, enhanced ray tracing performance, and improved media encoding quality. RDNA 4 cards will also feature AMD's second-gen AI accelerators, third-gen ray tracing accelerators, and a second-gen radiance display engine. The most notable part of this announcement, at least for now, is the introduction of FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 (FSR 4), a new generation of AMD's upscaling and frame-generation technology. Powered by machine learning and specifically designed for RDNA 4's AI hardware, FSR 4 will be exclusive to the RX 9070 series initially and will be supported in games with FSR 3.1 integration. Microsoft's Matt Booty confirmed that Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 will feature FSR 4 support later this year. ✕ Remove Ads Unfortunately, this announcement is uncomfortably light on details. Aside from Matt Booty going on stage to confirm that the new Call of Duty game will have FSR 4, it was the only mention of FSR 4, and the new RDNA 4 cards weren't mentioned once during the keynote. We know that FSR 4 is using dedicated AI accelerators in a similar way to DLSS (which by extension makes it exclusive to RDNA 4 cards), but we don't know exactly in which other ways FSR 4 is better than FSR 3, or how it compares to its predecessor or to competitors such as DLSS. We also don't know how the Radeon RX 9070 XT and the RX 9070 compare to other cards. They might be comparable to NVIDIA's RTX 4070/4070 Ti, especially as AMD seemingly gave up on high-end cards. RDNA 4 cards are slated for a Q1 2025 release and they should land on store shelves from a variety of third-party manufacturers over the next few weeks, so keep an eye at your favorite graphics card brand. Source: The Verge ✕ Remove Ads
[3]
AMD's Radeon RX 9070 and RDNA 4 embrace the AI revolution
AMD gave a brief preview of its next-gen Radeon RX 9070 and RDNA 4 architecture at CES 2025. The rumors were true! AMD unveiled the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT during the company's CES 2025 keynote on Monday, powered by the next-generation RDNA 4 architecture with a new AI-focused version of FSR (FidelityFX Super Resolution) in tow. Gamers hoping for deep details were left wanting, however, as AMD classified this as a "preview" without much hard information. It was more of a tease than anything, honestly, though it's clear that AMD is finally, truly embracing AI hardware within GPUs. Here's what we do know. For years, AMD has battled Nvidia's vaunted DLSS using (mostly) graphics cores rather than integrating dedicated AI hardware. Not anymore. AMD says RDNA 4 was built from the ground up on TSMC's 4nm process to "supercharge" AI performance, driven by a massive overhaul to the AI compute architecture. Next-gen Radeon GPUs will also benefit from an upgraded ray tracing architecture, as well as "substantial improvements" to the second-gen AMD Radiance Display Engine's encode and decode performance. So far, so good -- though the devil will be in the details around this seemingly monumental architecture change for Radeon, and AMD isn't providing any more details than this just yet. The added AI chops in RDNA 4 and the Radeon RX 9070 will be immediately augmented by a new software feature: FidelityFX Super Resolution 4. AMD told press that FSR 4 revolves around machine learning-based upscaling (like Nvidia's DLSS) and was developed specifically for the new AI accelerators in RDNA 4. The company teased it with a screenshot of Call of Duty: Black Ops 6. Expect to see "dramatic" performance and quality improvements versus prior versions of FSR, per AMD. Which makes sense, given that AMD's primarily GPU-based FSR technology has lagged in those areas compared to DLSS and even Intel's XeSS features, which both tap into dedicated AI hardware to provide buttery-smooth upscaled gaming experiences. To drive home that Radeon is embracing AI now, the company's Adrenalin Software will also add a generative AI tab, where you can create images from text prompts or ask AI to summarize local documents. Eh, okay. AMD finished its teaser with a splash shot of Radeon RX 9070 graphics cards from a variety of board partners. All the usual suspects are here, with the odd exception of MSI. The company also provided press with the above slide to try to illustrate what AMD is trying to do with its new model numbers. Radeon is leaping to the 9000-series (to align with Ryzen 9000-series branding) while also moving branding for specific GPU models from the 100s to the 10s spot in the name (to align with Nvidia's scheme). AMD wants you to know that the Radeon RX 9070 is an Nvidia RTX 5090 competitor, essentially. And that is probably why AMD is light on RDNA 4 details at CES. Its keynote was held mere hours ahead of Nvidia's own, where Jensen Huang is expected to reveal the hotly anticipated GeForce RTX 50-series GPUs. AMD likely wants to see where its rival's pricing and performance fall before committing to specific segments itself. Either way, it's great to see AMD finally embrace the potential of dedicated AI hardware. AI upscaling is killing native graphics, after all. The company says it'll provide more information about the Radeon RX 9070 and RDNA 4 ahead of launch sometime in the first quarter of 2025.
[4]
Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 GPUs launching Q1 2025, RDNA 4 officially announced
TL;DR: AMD announced its RDNA 4 graphics architecture at CES 2025, featuring the Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 GPUs. RDNA 4 offers optimized compute units, enhanced AI, improved raytracing, and better media encoding. It introduces FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 for 4K upscaling. Specs include a 4nm process and advanced AI and raytracing accelerators. No performance benchmarks or release dates were provided. AMD announced its next-generation RDNA 4 graphics architecture at CES 2025. The first two desktop GPUs to utilize the new tech are the Radeon RX 9070 XT and the Radeon RX 9070. AMD confirms that RDNA 4 features optimized compute units (CUs) compared to previous generations like RDNA 3, "supercharged" AI, improved raytracing performance per CU, and better media encoding quality for creators. In addition, RDNA 4 will see the debut of AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 4, which is embracing AI for high-quality 4K upscaling and Frame Generation. The FSR 4 teaser includes an image of Activision's Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, so we can expect this to be one of the first titles to include FSR 4. Unfortunately, during the CES 2025 pre-briefing, AMD did not provide performance benchmarks, release dates, or in-depth details for the new RDNA 4 GPUs. More information is coming later this quarter. AMD has confirmed the following specs for RDNA 4. Without gaming benchmarks to see where performance sits, RDNA 4 will not launch in January 2025, as the rumors have suggested. This leaves NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 50 Series launch alone for the month. For the moment, we can go on our pre-announcement rumors that the Radeon RX 9070 XT will be based on the Navi 48 GPU, with a boost clock speed close to 3 GHz, 16GB of GDDR6 memory on a 256-bit memory bus, and a power rating of around 260W. The non-Xt variant is expected to ship with a lower-specced Navi 48 GPU and 12GB of VRAM. However, AMD did provide a quick look at some of the actual Radeon RX 9070 XT and Radeon RX 9070 GPUs, confirming that models from all of its AIB (add-in board) partners, including Acer, ASRock, ASUS, GIGABYTE, PowerColor, XFX, Yeston, and more, are on the way.
[5]
AMD is conceding to Nvidia with the RX 9070 XT and FSR 4
CES 2025 Read and watch our complete CES coverage here Updated less than 6 minutes ago AMD revealed its long-awaited RDNA 4 architecture at CES 2025, but it arrived with more of a thud and less of a bang. Although the new RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 could make the list of the best graphics cards, it's hard to say if they will right now, despite the fact that the cards are expected to arrive in the first few months of this year. In its action-packed CES keynote, the new RDNA 4 range was a passing note instead of the main event. Although details about the new RDNA 4 architecture are light, AMD says it updated just about every aspect of its GPU design. That includes better ray tracing performance with third-gen RT accelerators, broader media encoding support with a second-gen AMD Radiance Display engine, and critically, AI grunt with second-gen AI accelerators. Those AI accelerators are important, as it appears they'll power AMD's next-gen FSR 4 upscaling and frame generation tech. AMD has been fighting against Nvidia's DLSS for years now, but FSR 4 looks like a turning point. The company says the ML-powered feature was "developed for RDNA 4," which means the feature is exclusive to RDNA 4 graphics cards. It's worth noting that AMD's last-gen GPUs, like the RX 7900 XTX and RX 7900 XT, come with first-gen AI accelerators as well. Recommended Videos Still, only RDNA 4 GPUs will be able to use the new feature, and AMD says it'll be available in games that already support FSR 3.1. For RDNA 4, AMD announced that the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 will arrive in the first quarter of 2025, but it didn't provide a release date. The company also revealed that it's working on a range of RX 9060 GPUs, though it didn't detail any specifics about that range. As rumors have suggested for over a year, and as AMD has hinted at itself, the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 won't compete with Nvidia at a flagship level. AMD is targeting midrange gamers with its new GPUs. Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming ReSpec Subscribe Check your inbox! Privacy Policy Thankfully, AMD detailed where it expects RDNA 4 GPUs to fall in relation to the rest of the market. You can see how AMD breaks down the comparison below. AMD didn't share any hard performance numbers, but it looks like the RX 9070 XT will perform about as fast as an RTX 4070 Ti or RX 7900 XT, while the RX 9070 will compete with the RTX 4070 Super and RX 7900 GRE. How well AMD's GPUs will compete is an open question, however, and one that reviewers will have to answer once the cards are available. Despite scaling down its graphics card lineup, AMD is still coming out in full force with partner designs from Acer, Asus, Sapphire, XFX, ASRock, Gigabyte, PowerColor, and more. AMD hasn't revealed a Made By AMD design for the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070, suggesting that we'll only see board partner designs. The question on the tip of everyone's tongue is how much these new GPUs will cost, which is a detail AMD didn't disclose during its keynote. Not only does AMD have last-gen GPUs to contend with, it also has Nvidia's RTX 50-series GPUs to go up against, and we expect those to be announced later today during Nvidia's CES keynote.
[6]
RDNA 4 Emerges! AMD Unveils Red-Hot Radeon RX 9000 GPUs With Big AI Focus
For as long as I can remember, I've had love of all things tech, spurred on, in part, by a love of gaming. I began working on computers owned by immediate family members and relatives when I was around 10 years old. I've always sought to learn as much as possible about anything PC, leading to a well-rounded grasp on all things tech today. In my role at PCMag, I greatly enjoy the opportunity to share what I know. AMD's highly anticipated RDNA 4 graphics cards will launch soon, headed by Radeon RX 9070 and Radeon RX 9070 XT GPUs, the company announced at CES 2025. The new RDNA 4 graphics architecture has several improvements, according to the chip maker, including faster graphics performance, more powerful AI processing, and AMD's third-generation ray-tracing accelerators. It isn't yet clear how these GPUs will stack up against Nvidia's inevitable GeForce RTX competition when these new Radeons drop during AMD's vague timeline of "Q1 2025," but you can be sure the next few months will be exciting as we discover more about them, and what they're up against. Meet the AMD Radeon RX 9070 -- No, That's Not a Typo If you're familiar with AMD's existing graphics cards, the first thing you likely noticed is that the number scheme here is slightly different. You may even think I've typed it wrong. This is because AMD has traditionally used the hundreds digit to differentiate its graphics cards, like the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT versus the AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT. That stops here, however, and for the time being, AMD will instead use the tens digits for this purpose, similar to what Nvidia does. AMD is not coy about the reason for this: The company clearly stated this was to better match up with its competitors, i.e., Nvidia. I have no complaints here! While I liked the older way AMD numbered its graphics cards, this new system will better indicate which of AMD's latest graphics cards compare with which models from Nvidia or Intel for consumers who don't spend all day keeping score in the GPU world. AMD's information tipped off that a Radeon RX 9060 series is in the offing, too, but it gave no other details on these products. AMD's RDNA 4 Highlights: More Speed, More AI AMD didn't provide a deep dive (yet) into what has changed inside of the new RDNA 4 architecture or the latest Radeon RX 9070 graphics cards. We don't know what resources these GPUs will have, or the clock speeds at which any RDNA 4 GPU will operate. Those details will undoubtedly come closer to the actual launch of these GPUs, but for now, we have a few interesting bits of info to chew on. The RDNA 4 architecture looks to be a significant update from the existing RDNA 3 that powers current Radeon RX 7000-series GPUs. According to AMD, the design is optimized for more instructions per clock and higher clock speeds, which is peculiar as improving both simultaneously tends to be exceedingly difficult. These efforts were undoubtedly helped by the transition to a new 4-nanometer manufacturing process, presumably from TSMC. AMD didn't explicitly say that TSMC is fabricating these GPUs, but it was the manufacturer for the last several generations of AMD GPUs, so that would make the most sense. In addition to the faster clocks and shader improvements, AMD said that RDNA 4 GPUs have third-generation AMD ray-tracing accelerators. We don't have a clear idea how the ray tracing compares with the previous generation, but I hope we see considerable improvement here, or at least a significant increase in the number of ray-tracing accelerators, as this has been a notable weakness for AMD GPUs across several generations. AMD's second-gen AI accelerator technology, used to power several AI software utilities that will launch alongside Radeon 9000-series GPUs, received more attention. The most exciting of these looks to be a new version of AMD's FSR technology, now referred to as FSR 4. Per AMD, this technology uses machine learning to upscale lower-resolution content to 4K while maintaining high image fidelity. RDNA 4 also works with frame generation to boost performance even more, and it works with AMD's Anti-Lag 2 technology to help reduce input latency. However, unlike most FSR technologies, this one isn't backward-compatible with previous graphics cards. To use FSR 4, you will need an AMD Radeon 9000-series graphics card. Like Nvidia, AMD is also pushing AI utilities as part of its graphics software suite. Initially, this will include three utilities that could prove helpful. First, AMD has a document-summarization tool that, as you can guess, will give you a summary of a block of text you feed it, powered locally by the GPU. Next up is a support tool that uses AI to answer questions you ask related to AMD products. The most useful -- and probably most fun -- AI utility that AMD will serve up allows you to generate images via a text prompt. However, none of these AI functions is groundbreaking; instead, they catch AMD's GPUs up to current expectations for AI functionality. AMD's Plans for Positioning the Radeon 9000 Series That covers the bulk of AMD's information related to its RDNA 4-based Radeon 9000-series GPUs, but AMD shared one interesting slide that may provide insight into how these cards will compare with existing products, despite the lack of any pricing information so far. As you can see in the image, the Radeon RX 9070 series is set at a similar level to AMD's Radeon RX 7900 XT and the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Ti at the top end, while the RX 9060 series is set roughly on a level with the RX 7700 XT and the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti. AMD gave no context around this chart, but it seems clearly meant to indicate relative performance. If this is comparing performance, then it seems the Radeon RX 9070 series won't be quite as fast as AMD's current flagship, the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX, which could suggest a Radeon RX 9080-series card to come in the future. However, I still suspect that AMD is focused on the midrange and budget PC graphics markets, where it can reach more customers. So it's possible an RX 9070 XT may end up being the peak card. Then again, in the past, we have seen AMD and Nvidia kick off new generations of graphics cards with midrange cards, so this wouldn't be so surprising, assuming AMD still wants to fight in the heavyweight class. AMD's larger plans for its place in the GPU market in 2025 and beyond aren't yet clear, but we're eager to test these products once they're available, regardless.
[7]
AMD previews RDNA 4 graphics with AI upscaling, teases RX 9070 GPUs
AMD may finally have an answer to NVIDIA's DLSS with FidelityFX Super Resolution 4, While all eyes are on NVIDIA for its RTX 5000 GPUs at CES 2025, AMD is also taking the opportunity to give us a glimpse at its upcoming RDNA 4 graphics architecture. While specifics are scarce, the company says its new GPUs will be built on a 4nm process with "optimized" compute units, "supercharged" AI computation and better ray tracing per compute unit. The big reveal, though, is that its new FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 (FSR4) will be powered by machine learning, just like NVIDIA's DLSS technology. AMD claims FSR 4 will offer "high quality" 4K upscaling, frame generation and low latency support with AMD Anti-Lag 2. No surprises there, really, but it's nice to see AMD finally move beyond the more simplistic upscaling from previous versions of FSR. The company also briefly revealed the existence of its new Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT GPUS, as well as its new naming scheme which directly mirrors NVIDIA's. Now instead of trying to decode how AMD's video cards compete with NVIDIAs, you'll be able to directly compare the 9070 GPUs to NVIDIA's upcoming RTX 5070 lineup. Less compelling, but somewhat notable, AMD is also adding a few generative AI features into its Adrenalin software. You'll be able to create AI images, summarize documents and ask "AMD-related" questions. Just what everyone has been waiting for!
[8]
New Radeon RX 9000 GPUs promise to fix two of AMD's biggest weaknesses
Nvidia is widely expected to announce specs, pricing, and availability information for the first few cards in the new RTX 50 series at its CES keynote later today. AMD isn't ready to get as specific about its next-generation graphics lineup yet, but the company shared a few morsels today about its next-generation RDNA 4 graphics architecture and its 9000-series graphics cards. AMD mentioned that RDNA 4 cards were on track to launch in early 2025 during a recent earnings call, acknowledging that shipments of current-generation RX 7000-series cards were already slowing down. CEO Lisa Su said then that the architecture would include "significantly higher ray-tracing performance" as well as "new AI capabilities." The preview the company is providing today provides few details beyond those surface-level proclamations. The compute units will be "optimized," AI compute will be "supercharged," ray-tracing will be "improved," and media encoding quality will be "better," but AMD isn't providing hard numbers for anything at this point. The RDNA 4 launch will begin with the Radeon RX 9070 XT and 9070 at some point in Q1 of 2025, and AMD will provide more information "later in the quarter." The GPUs will be built on a 4 nm process, presumably from TSMC, an upgrade from the 5 nm process used for the 7000-series GPUs and the 6 nm process used for the separate memory controller chiplets (AMD hasn't said whether RDNA 4 GPUs are using chiplets; the 7000 series used them for high-end GPUs but not lower-end ones). We do know that AMD's next-generation upscaling algorithm, FidelityFX Super Resolution 4, has been "developed for AMD RDNA 4," and it will be the first version of FSR to use machine learning-powered upscaling. Nvidia's DLSS and Intel's XeSS (when running on Intel GPUs) also use ML-powered upscaling, which generally leads to better results but also has stricter hardware requirements than older versions of FSR. AMD isn't saying whether FSR 4 will work on any older Radeon cards.
[9]
AMD showcases RDNA 4 with more AI and new GPU names
AMD previewed its next-gen RDNA 4 GPU architecture during CES 2025. This latest generation of graphics processing from Team Red emphasizes "performance and immersions, supercharged with AI." This is an area AMD has suffered with compared to Nvidia's hard-hitting (and incredibly powerful) AI-driven technologies, such as DLSS. Intel continues to develop its own XeSS technology, so it only makes sense for AMD to push AI hard with RDNA 4. Alongside the RDNA 4 preview, AMD confirmed plans to switch up how it names its GPUs with the new RX 9000 series (and 8000 series for mobile GPUs). Shaking things up with new chips and names Close According to AMD, RDNA 4 will deliver improved raytracing performance per compute unit, better media encoding quality, and more with optimized compute units and supercharged AI computing. RDNA 4 will be based on a 4nm process, using 2nd-gen AI accelerators, 3rd-gen raytracing accelerators, and 2nd-gen AMD Radiance Display Engine. The new AI and RT accelerators are expected to aid the company in improving overall performance and quality for supported games, something AMD has struggled with against Intel and Nvidia. Progress has been made through new software updates, but AMD needed to up its hardware game. To that end, AMD teased FidleityFX Super Resolution (FSR) 4 with machine-learning upscale support. It's developed specifically for RDNA 4 GPUs and will offer 4K upscaling, high-performance gains with AMD's frame generation tech, and low latency. How FSR 4 will compare against DLSS from Nvidia will be interesting to see, but hopefully, AMD will have made considerable gains on all fronts and not be left behind by the competition. Intel made waves with its B580 launch, offering excellent 1440p performance with XeSS for just $250. 2025 should be the year we see notable moves from AMD and Nvidia. Related What is FSR? Everything you need to know about AMD's DLSS3 competitor FSR is just like DLSS, but its open-source nature makes all the difference. Posts As for the GPUs themselves, RDNA 4 will see the AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 launch in Q1 2025. You may have noticed the slight difference in the naming for AMD's graphics cards and that's because the company wants to position its GPU range more closely against Intel to make comparisons easier for customers. AMD plans to use the RX 9070 series to presumably compete against Nvidia's mid-range RTX 5000 GPUs and RX 9060 for the low end (and the Intel B580). I'm not sure if I'm a fan of this name switch, but it'll take some getting used to -- at least it matches AMD Ryzen 9000 CPUs. We'll likely see more GPUs launch as the year progresses, but AMD will recreate the RX 7000 launch with two flagship cards, the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070.
[10]
The AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT is officially on the way, but the first RDNA 4 graphics card isn't an RTX 5090 rival
The AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070, marking the launch of RDNA 4 graphics card. Just like the RX 7900 XTX, the new GPU line-up won't be taking on Nvidia frontrunners like the RTX 5090 in terms of performance, but it could lure PC players looking for an affordable 4K experience this generation. Scheduled to land Q1 2025, the AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT will enter the best graphics card race with a 4nm RDNA 4 GPU, boasting improved ray tracing core performance and new AI capabilities. The latter goes hand in hand with the red team's AMD Fidelity FX Super Resolution 4, which may finally bring the AI fight to DLSS using machine learning-powered upscaling. AMD FSR 4 will seemingly only work with new Radeon 9070-class cards, so that in itself could be a reason to opt for one of the RDNA 4 models over an older RX 7900 card. The component maker seems to be pitching the 9070 XT as on par with the 7900 XT, but says the successor will provide a "significant boost in AI." Simply put, we're looking at a more affordable 4K GPU with top-end abilities that can pull more impressive upscaling tricks. It's also worth touching on AMD's new naming conventions since RX 9070 looks more like either a typo or a future Nvidia graphics card than a Radeon GPU tier. The company says the decision will help players better recognise model tiers at a glace. It also helps the company's card names match up with its Ryzen 9000 series CPUs, unifying both with generational terminology. I'm not so convinced the new naming conventions will help make shopping for a graphics card easier, and the fact AMD has reserved the entire Ryzen 8000 series for its RDNA 3.5 APU range makes things that bit more complicated. Nevertheless, it should mean using the exact same patter to identity GPU class as you would with an Nvidia card, with XX90 representing top-end models. I was fully expecting to hear more about the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 during AMD's CES 2025 presentation, but for whatever reason, its gaming section only covered the gaming CPU side of things. So, if it's RDNA 4 specs you're after, you'll sadly have to wait a little longer. What I can confirm right now is that both those cards and a lower-spec RX 7060 are in the pipeline, and I'll be sure to update you all when I have its official price and abilities.
[11]
AMD just gave us our first look at the Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 RDNA 4 GPUs and I am officially whelmed
A preview rather than a full-on announcement, but it's a brief look at the next-gen GPU competition at least. CES 2025 is officially underway, and the first of our big GPU hitters has broken ranks. Sort of. AMD's RDNA 4 graphics cards have long been anticipated, and now we've been given a preview of what to expect from the next-generation AMD GPUs. In a pre-briefing at least, as AMD didn't actually show us anything regarding the new GPUs at the keynote itself. Built on a 4nm process, the RDNA 4 architecture features second-generation Gen AI accelerators, third-gen Raytracing accelerators, and a second-generation AMD Radiance Display engine, with optimised compute units, "supercharged" AI compute, and improved ray tracing per CU. AMD is also promising better media encoding and decoding image quality and plans to introduce FSR 4 alongside the new architecture. Unlike previous iterations, FSR 4 will be machine learning-powered, which hopefully will bring it closer to parity with Nvidia's AI-based DLSS. AMD says the FSR 4 upgrade feature will only be available on AMD Radeon RX 9070-series cards for supported games with AMD FSR 3.1 already integrated. So, it looks like that improved AI compute will be necessary to power the latest version of AMD's upscaling tech, as AMD has also promised a "significant boost in AI" for the new cards. The announcement was very light on details, so we're still not sure exactly how many compute units will be on offer for each GPU, how much VRAM will be provided, or what bus width the new cards will be using... really, not much technical detail at all beyond the existence of RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 models. So, a bit less than I was personally expecting, at the very least. Still, there's info to be gleaned here, including that the new cards will be available in Q1 of this year. With the next-generation Nvidia RTX 50-series cards expected to be announced later this evening, many will be hoping for AMD to provide some robust competition in the mid-range market for the new cards. As for the high-end, however, that game was over before it really started. AMD's Jack Huyhn has already stated that the next-gen Radeon cards won't be targeting the top-end of the market, so really it looks like a potential RTX 5070 would be the card to beat for the RX 9070 XT moving forward. And will it? Who knows. With details still thin on the ground, it's difficult to judge what the potential performance might be at this stage -- and that's always a guessing game until we test the cards for ourselves. Regardless, it looks like it'll be a little while longer before we get some cold hard data on exactly what sort of specs to expect from these cards, although hopefully, it won't be too long before we slam them into our benchmarking rigs for a thorough test session. In the meantime, this is what we've got. It's not a lot, but at least RDNA 4 is well on its way, ey?
[12]
AMD announces next-gen Radeon RX 9070-series GPUs with AI-powered FSR 4 upscaling
AMD is previewing its next generation of GPUs at CES today, based on its latest RDNA 4 architecture that includes AI-powered FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 (FSR 4) upscaling. The Radeon RX 9070 XT and Radeon RX 9070 will both be available in Q1 from a variety of video card manufacturers, but AMD isn't detailing specifications, pricing, or exact release dates just yet. The announcement is light on concrete information. AMD says it has built this architecture from the ground up and that the GPUs built on RDNA 4 will include "a significant boost in AI." AMD has optimized the compute units in RNDA 4, improved its ray-tracing engine and performance, and upgraded its media encoding quality. Built on a 4nm process, the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 cards will include AMD's second-generation AI accelerators, third-generation ray-tracing accelerators, and second-generation radiance display engine.
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AMD Radeon RX 9070 & RX 9060 "RDNA 4" GPUs Unveiled: 4nm With Next-Gen AI, RT, Display Engines, ML-Powered FSR 4 For RDNA 4, Tackle 4070 & 4060 Series
AMD's RDNA 4 GPUs are now official with the Radeon RX 9070 & RX 9060 series, which come with ML-boosted FSR 4 support and much more. AMD's GPU division last saw the release of the Radeon RX 7000 series based on the RDNA 3 architecture. It has been over a year since that release and today, AMD is going a different route with the introduction of its RDNA 4 lineup. Instead of focusing on the ultra-enthusiast segment, AMD's RDNA 4 lineup will be going up against the more mainstream offerings from NVIDIA and Intel. The AMD RDNA 4 Graphics Architecture The AMD RDNA 4 graphics architecture has been designed from the ground up and brings with it several new upgrades, such as Optimized Compute Units, Supercharged AI Compute, Improved Ray Tracing capabilities per compute unit, and better Media Encoding quality. These are enabled by the use of the 2nd Gen AI Accelerators, 3rd Gen Raytracing Accelerators, and a 2nd Gen AMD Radiance DisplayEngine. The new GPUs will be based on a 4nm process node, an upgrade over the 5nm/6nm process technologies harnessed by the RDNA 3 chips. The other difference is that RDNA 4 removes the MCM design, going to a singular monolithic die instead of disaggregating the chips into GCD and MCD blocks. AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT & Radeon RX 9070 Available In Q1 2025, RX 9060 Series Later For products, AMD will first be introducing two graphics cards based on the RDNA 4 architecture, the Radeon RX 9070 XT and the Radeon RX 9070. These GPUs will come equipped with up to 16 GB of video memory. The Radeon RX 9070 XT will compete against the RTX 4070 Ti while the RX 9070 will compete against the RTX 4070. The Radeon RX 9060 series will be competing against the RTX 4060 series. AMD is also simplifying the naming scheme to sync with its Ryzen 9000 series CPUs, while the GPU model naming has been simplified to match that of its competitors. So, the 9070 equals an NVIDIA "70" class competitor, while the 9060 equals an NVIDIA "60" class competitor. The XT and non-XT variants have the same segmentation as before, with the XT being the higher-end offering, while the non-XT variant is designed to be a more cost-effective offering. Both the AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT and Radeon RX 9070 GPUs will be available in both reference and non-reference flavors from leading AIBs such as ASUS, ASRock, Gigabyte, PowerColor, XFX, ACER, Sapphire, Yeston and Vastarmor. AMD FSR 4, Red Team's First Fully AI-Based Upscaling Solution One big feature of the AMD RDNA 4 architecture is support for FSR 4. The new technology will only be supported on RDNA 4 GPUs and will feature parity with NVIDIA's DLSS and Intel's XeSS, which also leverage dedicated AI accelerators for upscaling available on the GPU dies. FSR 4 is said to offer a high-quality 4K upscaling with additional high-performance provided through FSR's Frame-Gen and lower latency thanks to Anti-Lag 2. The best part about AMD's FSR 4 is that it will be supported across all games that already have FSR 3.1 integration. The main highlight of FSR 4 is Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, but FSR 3.1 is already available for several high-profile AAA games, so that means those are ready with FSR 4 too. You just need to have a supported RDNA 4 GPU, such as the new Radeon RX 9070 & Radeon RX 9060 series. AMD Adrenalin AI, Your All-In-One Toolset For AI Needs AMD is also introducing a brand-new utility with its Adrenali software suite called "Adrenalin AI", which will allow users to Generate Images, Summarize Local Documents and Ask AMD-Related Questions. This is similar to NVIDIA's ChatRTX and Intel's AI PlayGround. AMD was already with AMUSE on offering an AI-centric utility, but it's good to see that everyone who is using the AMD Adrenalin suite will have access to these features for a personalized and local AI experience. AMD will be sharing more information on its RDNA 4 GPUs in the coming days, so stay tuned as we enter the fourth iteration of the RDNA architecture.
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AMD RDNA 4 Radeon RX 9000-series GPUs revealed: Targeting mainstream price and performance with improved AI and ray tracing
The next generation AMD GPUs will have a new model number structure to match Nvidia's offerings. AMD's RDNA 4 GPUs have seen a few leaks and rumors over the past year, and now AMD has pulled back the curtain a little bit to reveal its next generation Radeon RX 9000-series graphics cards. As expected, AMD will be focusing on the performance-mainstream market, eschewing the extreme end of the performance and pricing ladder -- and perhaps skipping the budget segment. Release dates, specifications, and pricing are still under wraps, but at least two of the model names are now official, with two more now effectively confirmed. These will compete with the best graphics cards. We expect to see early samples of AMD's upcoming GPUs at CES 2025 this week, but it remains to be seen just how many details will be shared. This is by no means an official launch of the GPUs, and AMD says it's only "previewing" RDNA 4 at CES 2025. The launch date at present simply says Q1 2025, and that's for the first two graphics cards in the lineup. We anticipate other models will become available later in the year, perhaps before June but nothing official has been stated at present. Here's what we know. The RDNA 4 architecture name was a given, barring a major change in branding and direction. AMD will move to a 4nm TSMC process node -- we don't know if that's N4, N4P, or some other variant -- which should bring some decent density and efficiency improvements. This will also be the third generation of AMD's Ray Accelerators, and the second generation of the AI Accelerators and Radiance Display Engine. About the only truly surprising aspect of RDNA 4 is that it took AMD this long to seriously invest in AI cores for its consumer GPUs -- the CDNA architectures have had tensor processing units for several years now. The fundamental changes haven't been shared, only somewhat nebulous statements. RDNA 4 will have "optimized" compute units (CUs), "supercharged" AI compute, "improved" ray tracing, and "better" media encoding quality. Those are all good things to see in a new GPU architecture, but until we have additional details, and more importantly, until we've been able to put everything to the test, these are merely statements and claims. One interesting question is whether or not AMD will continue to utilize the GPU chiplet approach that it introduced with RDNA 3. There was no discussion of that as yet, and it seems like it could go either way. With RDNA 3, AMD had two larger GPUs, Navi 31 and Navi 32, that used a GCD (Graphics Compute Die) matched with anywhere from three to six MCDs (Memory Cache Dies). The lower tier Navi 33 opted to stick with a monolithic design and an older process node. RDNA 4 appears to only have two GPUs planned, currently rumored but not confirmed to be called Navi 44 and Navi 48. These should take over for the RX 7600 through RX 7900 XT, based on AMD's slides, but we don't have CU counts, memory configurations, or other details at present. We can only hope that AMD will leave the 8GB graphics card era in the past, and if it also uses GDDR7 memory we could even see 3GB chips -- meaning 50% more memory capacity for any given interface width, so 12GB on a 128-bit, 18GB on 192-bit, and 24GB on 256-bit. But again, there's no official information on the memory, cache, or use of chiplets at present. What AMD did officially disclose is the product branding and we would guess four different GPU names. AMD will sort of skip the Radeon 8000-series, leaving that for integrated solutions on mobile devices using the RDNA 3.5 architecture. There won't be any 8000-series desktop GPUs. Instead, AMD will use Radeon 9000-series branding, aligning its desktop lineup with the 9000-series Ryzen CPUs. It will also shift to using the tens digit to indicate relative performance levels, to match up with Nvidia's GPU models. At the top, AMD will have a Radeon RX 9070 XT that should take over from the RX 7900 XT and compete with the RTX 4070 Ti/Ti Super and perhaps the RTX 5070 Ti as well -- we'll need to wait and see official specs to determine where the parts actually match up. Below that will be the vanilla Radeon RX 9070, taking over from the 7900 GRE and 7800 XT and gunning for the RTX 5070 presumably. These are the two confirmed GPUs, with a Q1 2025 release date but no other hard information right now. AMD also showed the Radeon RX 9060 branding, and presumably we will get at least an RX 9060 XT and an RX 9060. As indicated in the slide, these will take over from the existing RX 7600/7600 XT and the RX 7700 XT. They'll also compete with Nvidia's existing RTX 4060 and 4060 Ti cards, and their eventual RTX 5060-class replacements. As part of the enhanced AI aspects, AMD also announced its upcoming FSR 4 upscaling technology, which will use the new and improved RDNA 4 AI Accelerators to provide machine-learning-based upscaling. That should make it similar to Nvidia's DLSS and Intel's XeSS, and it appears FSR 4 will be relatively easy to add to existing FSR 3.1 enabled games. Obviously, we'll need the new GPUs before we can test it. AMD also mentioned some AI-based tools like text summary and image generation will be integrated into its Adrenalin AI suite of software. Whether this will be part of the core GPU drivers package or a separate application isn't entirely clear, but it looks to be similar in principle to some of what Nvidia has done with the Nvidia App. Who will end up with the best graphics cards when the dust settles? It's far too early to say, but we'll be testing the hardware as soon as we're able. It's going to be an exciting year for graphics cards by all appearances.
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With the Radeon RX 9070 XT, AMD Is Aiming for the Mid-Range - IGN
After months of waiting for new graphics cards, the AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT has finally been announced and will be powering gaming PCs within the next few months. AMD has announced two graphics cards to spearhead its new generation: the AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070. AMD is using this generation of GPUs to rebrand a little bit, signalling that these GPUs are of the same generation as the AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D. It's also to draw closer comparisons with Nvidia, with the RX 9070 intended to compete with similarly branded "mid-range" Nvidia cards, like the RTX 4070. The RX 9070 XT is powered by the Zen 4 architecture, with all-new AI accelerators that enable AI upscaling in an AMD graphics card for the first time through FSR 4, or FidelityFX Super Resolution (more on that below). However, because AMD hasn't revealed the specs of these cards, I don't know how much of an improvement RDNA 4 will offer over AMD GPUs like the Radeon RX 7900 XT. AMD hasn't revealed an exact release date for the Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070, but has teased that it's coming sometime in Q1 2025. Likewise, Team Red hasn't revealed the price, though with it going up against an Nvidia xx70 GPU, I'd expect these graphics cards to cost anywhere from $499-$599 whenever they come out. Along with the new graphics cards, AMD has also announced FSR 4. Just like the PSSR, or Playstation Spectral Super Resolution, that Sony worked on with AMD to create for the PS5 Pro, this new upscaling method will be based on a machine learning algorithm. However, unlike PSSR, which runs its AI algorithm directly on the shading cores, FSR 4 will be utilizing specialized AI accelerators in RDNA 4, similar to how DLSS is handled on Nvidia graphics cards. This should substantially improve on both image quality and performance, thanks to Team Red finally utilizing the AI accelerators baked into each Compute Unit. AMD has also said that it has completely rebuilt its AI accelerators for this generation of cards, which explains why it has waited so long to implement an AI upscaler that can compete with the likes of XeSS and DLSS. More importantly, this new upscaler finally marks a point where every GPU manufacturer has an AI upscaling solution. As long as developers continue to add all three upscalers to their games, which is becoming more common, this new generation of graphics cards might mark an end to Nvidia's complete domination of any game with ray tracing enabled. However, with AMD only announcing the RX 9070 and drawing comparisons to the GeForce RTX 4070, Team Red doesn't seem to be punching for the top-end of the GPU market. Nvidia hasn't showed its next-generation hand yet, but assuming that the GeForce RTX 5090 - or whatever it's called - is significantly faster, AMD could just be leaving the super high end of the market for Nvidia, which is an approach that worked out well for Team Red in the RX 580 days. With the Intel Arc B580 aiming for the budget market and these new AMD cards aiming towards mid-range users, it's refreshing to see two of the GPU makers competing in a range that people can actually afford, rather than launching extremely powerful (and expensive) cards into the stratosphere for the few that can comfortably drop a couple grand on a new GPU. Intel's new card ended up being a nice surprise when I reviewed it back in December 2024. I won't know how these cards actually perform until I can get them in the lab for testing, but I'm actually hopeful that they'll provide a good value for PC gamers. It's been a while.
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AMD announces its next-generation RDNA 4 graphics architecture and Radeon RX 9070 series GPUs at CES 2025, featuring AI-focused improvements and the new FSR 4 upscaling technology.
At CES 2025, AMD made a significant announcement in the graphics card market, introducing its next-generation RDNA 4 architecture and the Radeon RX 9070 series GPUs 123. This new lineup, which includes the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070, marks AMD's entry into the AI-focused GPU arena, potentially challenging NVIDIA's dominance in this space.
The RDNA 4 architecture represents a substantial overhaul of AMD's GPU design, built on TSMC's 4nm process 23. Key improvements include:
One of the most notable features of the RDNA 4 GPUs is the introduction of FSR 4, AMD's latest upscaling and frame generation technology 123. FSR 4 is designed to leverage the new AI accelerators in RDNA 4, making it initially exclusive to the RX 9070 series. This technology aims to provide significant performance and quality improvements over previous versions, potentially competing more closely with NVIDIA's DLSS technology 3.
While AMD has been light on specific details, some information about the RX 9070 series has emerged:
AMD is positioning the RX 9070 series to compete in the mid-range market, potentially targeting performance levels similar to NVIDIA's RTX 4070 Ti and RTX 4070 Super 5. The company has confirmed that these new GPUs will be available from various board partners, including Acer, ASRock, ASUS, GIGABYTE, PowerColor, and XFX 14.
AMD has announced that the Radeon RX 9070 series will launch in the first quarter of 2025 34. This release timeline puts AMD in direct competition with NVIDIA's anticipated RTX 50-series GPUs, setting the stage for an intense battle in the graphics card market 5.
As the industry awaits more detailed specifications and performance benchmarks, the introduction of RDNA 4 and FSR 4 signifies AMD's commitment to advancing AI capabilities in consumer graphics, potentially reshaping the competitive landscape in GPU technology.
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AMD pushes back the launch of its RDNA 4 GPUs, including the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT, to March 2025. The delay is attributed to software development and the readiness of FSR 4, AMD's new AI-based upscaling technology.
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AMD launches its new Radeon RX 9070 and RX 9070 XT graphics cards, featuring RDNA 4 architecture with improved ray tracing and AI capabilities, targeting the midrange market with competitive pricing and performance.
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AMD announces FSR 4, an AI-enhanced upscaling technology for its new RDNA 4 GPUs, promising significant performance gains and improved image quality in over 30 games at launch.
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A major leak suggests AMD will unveil a wide range of new AI-capable processors and GPUs at CES 2025, including the RDNA 4 GPUs, Ryzen AI Max series, and next-gen gaming APUs, potentially positioning AMD as a strong competitor in the AI hardware market.
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AMD unveils FSR 4, an AI-based upscaling technology for its upcoming RDNA 4 GPUs, showcasing improved image quality and performance in early demonstrations.
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