AMD Radeon VII, Worlds First Gaming 7nm Graphics Card Review Roundup

Today is the day and now is the time, AMD Radeon has unleashed the worlds first 7nm gaming graphics card, the Radeon VII. A trimmed down but faster version of the last generation Vega architecture with some reworking on the 7nm node along with double the memory should prove this to be a quite the contender in the high end space.

The heart and soul of the aptly name Radeon VII is the 7nm variant of the Vega architecture dubbed Vega 20.  Rather than the 64 or 56 CU variants that were used in the Radeon RX Vega 64 and RX Vega 56 AMD decided to go with a 60 Compute Unit variant.  From numbers run in the past a RX Vega 56 that was vBIOS modded to run at RX Vega 64 clock speeds on the Core and HBM2 found that it was so close in performance that it made one question the need for the 64 Compute Unit model in gaming.  So the decision to go with lower than the maximum Compute Unit design makes sense here since AMD has committed the space and power saving features of the 7nm node to put that budget towards clock speed.  Because of that the Radeon VII is targeting a 1800MHz clock rate which is much higher than what any of the previous RX Vega cards would achieve on air.  The only one that came close to those clock speeds was the RX Vega 64 Liquid Cooled Edition that, while came with a nice watercooling design, carried a much higher TDP and power draw to reach those sustained clocks.  The Radeon VII aims to break that barrier all on air and this time packing 16GB of HBM2 with a mind melting 1TB/s of memory bandwidth, which should help give it an edge at higher resolutions where memory tends to be a constraint.

We would be remiss if we didn’t take a moment to discuss the much improved cooler design.  While aesthetics are very much a subjective manner, we can’t deny the welcomed addition of axial fans over the traditional blower style cooler.  And not only is AMD one upping the competition in terms of memory count, they are with fan count as well.  Three, count them, three axial fans atop a vapor chamber and heat pipe combination cooler is a welcome sight for a graphics card maker who has been traditionally slammed with each new graphics card over heat and noise concerns as far back as I can remember.  The question is, did they go for cooling performance with elevated fan noise, or go for silence at the expense of heat? I suppose the reviews will reveal that one.

 

Written Reviews

Any that are in need of updating when they go live I will remove the (- Not Live) from the site name.

AMD Radeon VII Review Roundup:

Review Publisher Graphics Card
Anandtech AMD Radeon VII
PCGamer - Not Live AMD Radeon VII
PCper AMD Radeon VII
Techpowerup AMD Radeon VII
Computerbase AMD Radeon VII
Techreport AMD Radeon VII
Tomshardware AMD Radeon VII
Hardocp - Not Live AMD Radeon VII
Eurogame - Not Liver AMD Radeon VII
PCWorld AMD Radeon VII
Hexus AMD Radeon VII
Kitguru AMD Radeon VII
Tweaktown AMD Radeon VII
4Gamer - Not Live AMD Radeon VII
Nordichardware - Not Live AMD Radeon VII
Techspot AMD Radeon VII
PCGameshardware AMD Radeon VII
Golem AMD Radeon VII
Hwbattle AMD Radeon VII
Hothardware AMD Radeon VII
Phoronix AMD Radeon VII
Lab501 AMD Radeon VII
Hardware.fr - Not Live AMD Radeon VII
HardwareLuxx AMD Radeon VII
Hardware.Info AMD Radeon VII
Xfastest AMD Radeon VII
Sweclockers AMD Radeon VII
Gamers Nexus AMD Radeon VII

Video Reviews

 

AMD Radeon Vega VII Specs Comparison:

Graphics Card AMD Radeon R9 Fury X AMD Radeon Vega 64 AMD Radeon Vega VII
GPU Fiji XT Vega 10 Vega 20
Process Node 28nm 14nm 7nm
Compute Units 64 64 60
Stream Processors 4096 4096 3840
Raster Operators 64 64 64
Texture Mapping Units 256 256 240
Clock Speed (Peak) 1050 MHz 1677 MHz (Liquid) 1800 MHz
FP32 Compute 8.6 TFLOPs 13.7 TFLOPs (Liquid) 13.8 TFLOPs
Memory (VRAM) 4 GB HBM 8 GB HBM2 16 GB HBM2
Memory Bus 4096-bit 2048-bit 4096-bit
Memory Bandwidth 512 GB/s 484 GB/s 1 TB/s
TDP 275W 350W (Liquid) 300W
Power Dual 8 Pin Dual 8 Pin Dual 8 Pin
Price $649 US $699 US (Liquid) $699 US
Launch 2015 2017 2019

Wit the reviews now on the table, let us know what you think of the Radeon VII.  Did it live up to your expectations? Are you happy to see AMD competing in the high end space again? Or are you simply waiting for Navi?  We seem to be at the point where we can see whether the short supply rumors were accurate or did AMD indeed have enough to meet demand.

The post AMD Radeon VII, Worlds First Gaming 7nm Graphics Card Review Roundup by Keith May appeared first on Wccftech.



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