Posts: 462   +2
Staff
Something to look forward to: Team Red will launch its Radeon RX 8000 graphics cards next year with a new RDNA 4 architecture. While a few leaks have already provided some insight into the next-gen GPUs, a new listing on a benchmarking website has now revealed some key specifications of what could be the flagship RDNA 4 graphics card.

The GPU appears on Geekbench with a GFX1201 device ID, suggesting it is an RDNA 4 SKU. For reference, RDNA 3 desktop cards have GFX11XX device IDs, and the RDNA 3.5 SKUs are designated GFX115X. Similarly, RDNA 2 cards use GFX103X IDs, while RDNA 1 GPUs are GFX101X.

The device ID suggests that the listed graphics card has the Navi 48 GPU, which will likely power the flagship RX 8000-series card next year. Geekbench lists it with 28 compute units, which could suggest 56 CUs and 3,584 Stream Processors if AMD retains the RDNA 3 configuration of a shader engine with dual compute engines for each work group processor.

The listing also shows a 2,101MHz clock speed, much slower than the 2.5GHz-2.6GHz boost clocks on the current RDNA 3 GPUs. If anything, the RDNA 4 cards should offer even higher frequencies than their RDNA 3 counterparts as they will use a more modern process node and a fresh new architecture.

Finally, the Radeon RX 8000 graphics card is listed with 16GB of memory, which matches the amount of VRAM found on the RX 7800 XT and RX 7900 GRE. The listing does not mention the speed or memory type, but rumors suggest it could sport GDDR6.

It is worth noting that Geekbench listed multiple instances of the Radeon RX 8000, and none of the scores are that impressive. The highest OpenCL score is 33,241, which is lower than the numbers racked up by the GTX 1650 and several times lower than the scores achieved by the RX 7900XTX. The disappointing benchmark scores suggest we're looking at a very early engineering sample, meaning it's still a work in progress. Either way, AMD still has a lot of fine-tuning to do before the next-gen cards are ready for prime time.

Permalink to story:

 
I do hope this is really something we can look forward to..
 
It'll be an engineering sample. I'm sure the real thing will be 7900XT/4070ti raster performance with hopefully similar RT performance but we shall have to wait and see.
 
RDOA 4: 16 giga when nvidea gives 24, DDR6 when nvidea gives D6X :(
 
It'll be an engineering sample. I'm sure the real thing will be 7900XT/4070ti raster performance with hopefully similar RT performance but we shall have to wait and see.
Well given the core count and AMDs track record, I'll take that bet. It'll be slower then a 7900 gre in raster and RT performance will be on par with a current 7800xt.
 
It'll be an engineering sample. I'm sure the real thing will be 7900XT/4070ti raster performance with hopefully similar RT performance but we shall have to wait and see.
Well the price is my concern, cause if with that performance and around 450 MSRP then I would pull the trigger xD
 
1440p GPUs for under $599...

 
RDOA 4: 16 giga when nvidea gives 24, DDR6 when nvidea gives D6X :(

But at what price point?

Currently the 16 gb cards made by AMD are at the same price level as 12 gb nvidia.
I imagine the new gen will be priced similar.

And sure there will be a bigger better Nvidia card, but most of us aren't willing to pay 1000+ dollars for a GPU.
So for most gamers, this might be a great card.
 
16GB RDNA4 could be a hit priced at $399 against 8GB Blackwell, but unfortunately will probably be priced at $599 against 12GB Blackwell since AMD for whatever reason is convinced that the perceived value fallacy is a viable strategy against nVidia...
 
16GB RDNA4 could be a hit priced at $399 against 8GB Blackwell, but unfortunately will probably be priced at $599 against 12GB Blackwell since AMD for whatever reason is convinced that the perceived value fallacy is a viable strategy against nVidia...
Being a loss leader has not done them any favors, so they may as well make the GPU division profitable from what few buyers they can muster.
 
OOOH, 16GB of VRAM! Way to pave the way forward, RDNA4 :sleeping:
If it slots into the price point of the current RX 7700 XT and performs faster and has 16GB VRAM, that is progress. It will (most likely) offer more VRAM and performance than Nvidia's similarly priced card as their current cards already do this.

The rumours suggest there's no high end RDNA 4 card, so the current RX 7900 XT/XTX won't get direct replacements and may well remain as the fastest Radeon GPU's next year.
 

Similar threads