Top AMD RDNA4 Part Could Offer RX 7900 XTX Performance at Half its Price and Lower Power (2024)

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Monday, January 29th 2024

Top AMD RDNA4 Part Could Offer RX 7900 XTX Performance at Half its Price and Lower Power (1)

by

btarunr
Discuss (354 Comments)

We've known since way back in August 2023, that AMD is rumored to be retreating from the enthusiast graphics segment with its next-generation RDNA 4 graphics architecture, which means that we likely won't see successors to the RX 7900 series squaring off against the upper end of NVIDIA's fastest GeForce RTX "Blackwell" series. What we'll get instead is a product stack closely resembling that of the RX 5000 series RDNA, with its top part providing a highly competitive price-performance mix around the $400-mark. A more recent report by Moore's Law is Dead sheds more light on this part.

Apparently, the top Radeon RX SKU based on the next-gen RDNA4 graphics architecture will offer performance comparable to that of the current RX 7900 XTX, but at less than half its price (around the $400 mark). It is also expected to achieve this performance target using a smaller, simpler silicon, with significantly lower board cost, leading up to its price. What's more, there could be energy efficiency gains made from the switch to a newer 4 nm-class foundry node and the RDNA4 architecture itself; which could achieve its performance target using fewer numbers of compute units than the RX 7900 XTX with its 96.

When it came out, the RX 5700 XT offered an interesting performance proposition, beating the RTX 2070, and forcing NVIDIA to refresh its product stack with the RTX 20-series SUPER, and the resulting RTX 2070 SUPER. Things could go down slightly differently with RDNA4. Back in 2019, ray tracing was a novelty, and AMD could surprise NVIDIA in the performance segment even without it. There is no such advantage now, ray tracing is relevant; and so AMD could count on timing its launch before the Q4-2024 debut of the RTX 50-series "Blackwell."

Sources:Moore's Law is Dead (YouTube), Tweaktown

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Add your own comment
#326
the54thvoid

Intoxicated Moderator

@SailorMan-PT - please post in English, or your next posts will be removed. This is an English speaking forum, thank you.

Bitte auf Englisch posten.

#327
Dr. Dro
AusWolfThe 4090 is sold by marketing and reviews calling it the fastest card available. Its performance per dollar is nowhere to be seen compared to literally anything else. It's the worst value Nvidia has ever shoved down on people's throats. So yeah, bragging rights.

Top AMD RDNA4 Part Could Offer RX 7900 XTX Performance at Half its Price and Lower Power (3)

The x50, x60 and x70 series are historically popular because they've historically been on the top of this chart, not on the bottom, within a stone's throw to the 4090.

However, the 4090 is the fastest and most feature-complete card by a quite significant margin. Looking at a chart like this can be misleading if you laser focus on relative performance per dollar, halo cards tend to be inflated (this has always been the case). The best value purchases are the cards that are in the 75-110% range relative to the GRE, which I think is probably the best one at a purely performance standpoint.

#328
AusWolf
Dr. DroHowever, the 4090 is the fastest and most feature-complete card by a quite significant margin. Looking at a chart like this can be misleading if you laser focus on relative performance per dollar, halo cards tend to be inflated (this has always been the case). The best value purchases are the cards that are in the 75-110% range relative to the GRE, which I think is probably the best one at a purely performance standpoint.

How is it more "feature complete" than any other 40-series card? How is being "feature complete" important when talking about value?

As for being the fastest, it is true, but at what cost? It's not just ultra expensive, ultra power hungry, but as soon as the 5090 is out, it'll drop its value like a rock. It is only for people who's got lots of spare cash to blow and don't care about value at all. For "normal folks" like me (that is, casual, or home gamers), a 4080 Super or 7900 XTX is a much better buy.

I don't think a card needs to be within any percent to the GRE. I think it needs to be as close to the top as possible, as long as it meets the performance level one needs. For example, a 6600 is a great buy, good value card, but only if its performance is enough for the targeted resolution, detail level and frame rate.

#329
JWNoctis
AusWolfHow is it more "feature complete" than any other 40-series card? How is being "feature complete" important when talking about value?

As for being the fastest, it is true, but at what cost? It's not just ultra expensive, ultra power hungry, but as soon as the 5090 is out, it'll drop its value like a rock. It is only for people who's got lots of spare cash to blow and don't care about value at all. For "normal folks" like me (that is, casual, or home gamers), a 4080 Super or 7900 XTX is a much better buy.

I don't think a card needs to be within any percent to the GRE. I think it needs to be as close to the top as possible, as long as it meets the performance level one needs. For example, a 6600 is a great buy, good value card, but only if its performance is enough for the targeted resolution, detail level and frame rate.

By the same logic, I'd almost say that the best overall value versus performance is actually somewhere around 4070, with or without Ti and/or the Super suffix. Those are the first cards with more than 8GB of VRAM and more-or-less non-gimped memory controller and PCIe bandwidth, and still fast enough for anything you can currently throw at it. Anything above gets expensive fast.

It might also be useful to recall that a 4090 should not lose much performance when tuned down to 300W, and is still much cheaper than an RTX 6000 Ada, for those who need it - and of course, with the money to buy that. Though if one's talking about feature-completeness on the AD102 silicon, it probably should be the RTX 6000 Ada, compared to which the 4090 is cut down the same way a 4080 non-Super was. The 4080 Super is supposedly a more-or-less complete AD103, with just a few video decoders and encoders fused out of use.

Back on the topic, if AMD really does pulls a rabbit out of the figurative hat, I guess they'd keep NVIDIA more honest, and make things better for customers of both companies.

#330
AusWolf
JWNoctisBy the same logic, I'd almost say that the best overall value versus performance is actually somewhere around 4070, with or without Ti and/or the Super suffix. Those are the first cards with more than 8GB of VRAM and more-or-less non-gimped memory controller and PCIe bandwidth, and still fast enough for anything you can currently throw at it. Anything above gets expensive fast.

I agree. As it was said before, x50 to x70 is where the biggest value usually is. It's only that both the 7600 and the 4060 are overpriced, and offer nothing extra this time around.

JWNoctisIt might also be useful to recall that a 4090 should not lose much performance when tuned down to 300W, and is still much cheaper than an RTX 6000 Ada, for those who need it - and of course, with the money to buy that. Though if one's talking about feature-completeness on the AD102 silicon, it probably should be the RTX 6000 Ada, compared to which the 4090 is cut down the same way a 4080 non-Super was. The 4080 Super is supposedly a more-or-less complete AD103, with just a few video decoders and encoders fused out of use.

Tuning is not an argument for a GPU - you can do the same with literally every other card. I had a 7800 XT that scaled down beautifully with a -10% power limit, losing only 2-3% performance. I didn't even have to undervolt it.

JWNoctisBack on the topic, if AMD really does pulls a rabbit out of the figurative hat, I guess they'd keep NVIDIA more honest, and make things better for customers of both companies.

Is that the good old "please AMD, be competitive so that we can buy cheap Nvidia cards again" argument? If so, that's just... No. One needs to put one's money where one's mouth is, otherwise the Nvidia monopoly will continue. Besides, AMD will not start a price war as long as GPUs are selling for current prices, and as long as TSMC charges an arm and leg for wafers on the most advanced nodes.

Personally, I'm refusing to buy an Nvidia card as long as they're all priced out of earth's atmosphere (that is, they're all £50-100 more expensive than the competing AMD product), and since I recently sold my 7800 XT, I'll almost definitely be looking at big Navi 4.

#331
JWNoctis
AusWolfIs that the good old "please AMD, be competitive so that we can buy cheap Nvidia cards again" argument? If so, that's just... No. One needs to put one's money where one's mouth is, otherwise the Nvidia monopoly will continue. Besides, AMD will not start a price war as long as GPUs are selling for current prices, and as long as TSMC charges an arm and leg for wafers on the most advanced nodes.

Personally, I'm refusing to buy an Nvidia card as long as they're all priced out of earth's atmosphere (that is, they're all £50-100 more expensive than the competing AMD product), and since I recently sold my 7800 XT, I'll almost definitely be looking at big Navi 4.

I could only wish I would not have to make that argument much longer. :(

Right now AMD offerings are not really competitive when GPU compute is involved. I'd easily go over to anyone offering a more cost-effective product.

#332
AusWolf
JWNoctisI could only wish I would not have to make that argument much longer. :(

Right now AMD offerings are not really competitive when GPU compute is involved. I'd easily go over to anyone offering a more cost-effective product.

At the end of the day, you've got to buy the GPU that offers the most value for your needs. If it's Nvidia, it's Nvidia, if it's AMD, then it's AMD. But wishing for one company to invest in making better products and then offer them at a low price only so that you can buy from the competition cheaper seems disingenuous to me. Sorry.

#333
JWNoctis
AusWolfAt the end of the day, you've got to buy the GPU that offers the most value for your needs. If it's Nvidia, it's Nvidia, if it's AMD, then it's AMD. But wishing for one company to invest in making better products and then offer them at a low price only so that you can buy from the competition cheaper seems disingenuous to me. Sorry.

That would be, and it's not quite what I meant - or focus, as more reasonable prices from both sides is one of the things that would be expected to happen with healthier competition going on. I was more worried about things slowing down, like what happened in CPU space when AMD was stuck with Bulldozer.

Eh, guess that came out wrong. My apologies about that. :oops:

#334
kapone32
Dr. DroRepeat that enough times and you may come to believe that yourself. People at large like money and performance per dollar far more than bragging rights, there's a reason the xx60-tier cards are historically the most popular amongst Steam users.

Mind you, it's weird I have to point this out but like, the folks behind NorthridgeFix, NorthwestRepair and similar channels, they may be brilliant technicians, but the key takeaway is that they're still YouTubers and as such, they are after views. It gets people to click when they make thumbnails with insane statements like "The 4090 has a chronic problem AND YOUR CARD WILL DIE!", the only issue with that statement is that it's hyperbole at best and a lie at worst. But it gets you to click on their video, which to their defense, is usually very informative and high quality - the important factor is that it is good for their business (both the channel and new customers for the repair shop). See it for what it is, entertainment value first, informational value second.

"People at large like money and performance per dollar far more than bragging rights," This is your statement. A 4090 is more than double what I would pay for a 7900XTX so thanks for supporting that argument. I saw you mentioned the 4060 and that is funny because the cost of the 4060 influences people to just get a Steam Deck for Gaming.

Dr. DroSigh. I shouldn't need to literally go on YT type in their names to give you the search results, but alas. Again, they aren't phony, their videos are entertaining and of high informational value, but you can't deny the thumbnail drama isn't there. There's nothing wrong with that, it's just a smart way to get people to click on the video. Things like "50% of all 4090 will end up in trash", "top reason not to buy AMD 7900 series GPU", "three melted 4090 melted connectors. This is toxic" (lol at the gas mask at the thumbnail of that one) and "4090 connectors are melting like chocolate", it's really just clickbait drama to draw in people to watch an actually good video. I'm not even gonna post the images because you can go there and look those up yourself

Yep because everyone making repair videos on Youtube are shills. You are showing yourself though because North West Repair actually prefers Nvidia cards over AMD and says as much in most of his videos. It is sad that you have to make these claims when the Company you support is in a leadership position. I guess the statements by Nvidia, Intel and MB vendors were just propaganda. I also don't understand how you are so happy to insert Nvidia in an AMD speculation post.

#335
Dr. Dro
kapone32"People at large like money and performance per dollar far more than bragging rights," This is your statement. A 4090 is more than double what I would pay for a 7900XTX so thanks for supporting that argument. I saw you mentioned the 4060 and that is funny because the cost of the 4060 influences people to just get a Steam Deck for Gaming.

Yep because everyone making repair videos on Youtube are shills. You are showing yourself though because North West Repair actually prefers Nvidia cards over AMD and says as much in most of his videos. It is sad that you have to make these claims when the Company you support is in a leadership position. I guess the statements by Nvidia, Intel and MB vendors were just propaganda. I also don't understand how you are so happy to insert Nvidia in an AMD speculation post.

Yes, a 4090 is more expensive than a 7900 XTX, because the 4090 is faster and in high demand, the 7900 XTX... is not. Furthermore, I never said they were shills. However, as with any YouTuber, they want views, and as such are prone to making baity titles to get clicks.

#336
AusWolf
Dr. DroYes, a 4090 is more expensive than a 7900 XTX, because the 4090 is faster and in high demand, the 7900 XTX... is not.

My only problem is that it's not proportionately faster. If it was $1200-1250 while the 7900 XTX is $900-950, I wouldn't have a problem with it, although personally, I consider even that way too much for a graphics card.

#337
kapone32
Dr. DroYes, a 4090 is more expensive than a 7900 XTX, because the 4090 is faster and in high demand, the 7900 XTX... is not. Furthermore, I never said they were shills. However, as with any YouTuber, they want views, and as such are prone to making baity titles to get clicks.

Prices have come down by $100 for 7900XTX. If what you are saying was true it would have been even more drastic. The fact that a 4090 is over $2000 where I live still matters to people.

#338
Dr. Dro
AusWolfMy only problem is that it's not proportionately faster. If it was $1200-1250 while the 7900 XTX is $900-950, I wouldn't have a problem with it, although personally, I consider even that way too much for a graphics card.

This has never been the case, though. No matter the brand or generation, or even if you take AMD's own current lineup to serve as an example, the 7900 XTX is twice as expensive as a 7800 XT, but it is nowhere near twice as fast. End of the day, NV is a business and they charge what they want, especially if the customers are willing to pay for it (they are)

#339
Super Firm Tofu
kapone32Prices have come down by $100 for 7900XTX. If what you are saying was true it would have been even more drastic. The fact that a 4090 is over $2000 where I live still matters to people.

Of course it matters - the prices are still high on the 4090 because of demand. If they weren't selling they'd drop the price. Just like your 7900XTX example: If it's not selling, it gets a discount.

An NVIDIA example of this was the 4080. The sales weren't where NVIDIA wanted them to be so the 4080S was released with a $200 discount. Funny thing is, the 4080S is selling above that because people want them.

#340
AusWolf
Dr. DroThis has never been the case, though. No matter the brand or generation, or even if you take AMD's own current lineup to serve as an example, the 7900 XTX is twice as expensive as a 7800 XT, but it is nowhere near twice as fast. End of the day, NV is a business and they charge what they want, especially if the customers are willing to pay for it (they are)

Does that mean that my jaw has to drop in front of the 4090's performance with no consideration towards its price or power consumption? Sorry, not gonna happen.

Since you mentioned it, even the 7900 XTX is way above the limit of what I consider a sensible price for a GPU. That's why I'm not affected by AMD's decision of not making a halo RDNA 4 GPU. If they can pull off a decent midrange card, I'm game.

#341
ARF
AusWolfDoes that mean that my jaw has to drop in front of the 4090's performance with no consideration towards its price or power consumption?

It has two more jaw-dropping features - gigantic size (that fits only in some PC cases) and a melting connector :D

#342
AusWolf
ARFIt has two more jaw-dropping features - gigantic size (that fits only in some PC cases) and a melting connector :D

Well, that's truly unique, I give you that. :D

#343
kapone32
Super Firm TofuOf course it matters - the prices are still high on the 4090 because of demand. If they weren't selling they'd drop the price. Just like your 7900XTX example: If it's not selling, it gets a discount.

An NVIDIA example of this was the 4080. The sales weren't where NVIDIA wanted them to be so the 4080S was released with a $200 discount. Funny thing is, the 4080S is selling above that because people want them.

For me where I live the price increase came down to Distributor Greed. The 4090 is s a popular GPU but the price is prohibitive.

#344
Dr. Dro
AusWolfDoes that mean that my jaw has to drop in front of the 4090's performance with no consideration towards its price or power consumption? Sorry, not gonna happen.

Since you mentioned it, even the 7900 XTX is way above the limit of what I consider a sensible price for a GPU. That's why I'm not affected by AMD's decision of not making a halo RDNA 4 GPU. If they can pull off a decent midrange card, I'm game.

The days of a $649 flagship are well past us, unfortunately. The pandemic was likely the last nail in that coffin. We're in agreement though - I'm game for a solid midranger. If they manage to beat the RTX 4080 with this next midranger, even better. I'll buy one as a gesture of goodwill.

#345
AusWolf
Dr. DroThe days of a $649 flagship are well past us, unfortunately. The pandemic was likely the last nail in that coffin. We're in agreement though - I'm game for a solid midranger. If they manage to beat the RTX 4080 with this next midranger, even better. I'll buy one as a gesture of goodwill.

Yep, those days have passed. Luckily, so have the days when you needed high-end hardware for acceptable frame rates at 1080p or 1440p. :)

#346
ARF
Dr. DroThe days of a $649 flagship are well past us

Radeon RX 6800 XT was only 5-10% short of RX 6900 XT, so I don't think these days are gone.

#347
Dr. Dro
ARFRadeon RX 6800 XT was only 5-10% short of RX 6900 XT, so I don't think these days are gone.

The 6800 XT is not a flagship and it is also four years old. The RTX 3080 had a similarly low MSRP, reality was different altogether.

#348
ARF
Dr. DroThe 6800 XT is not a flagship

If it has flagship or very near flagship performance, it is a lite version of the flagship.

#349
Dr. Dro
ARFIf it has flagship or very near flagship performance, it is a lite version of the flagship.

A quality which can be bestowed upon the RTX 3080 all the same. But no.

#350
kapone32
Dr. DroA quality which can be bestowed upon the RTX 3080 all the same. But no.

Can you even use a 3080 for 4K Gaming with new Games?

Add your own comment
Top AMD RDNA4 Part Could Offer RX 7900 XTX Performance at Half its Price and Lower Power (2024)

FAQs

What is the Nvidia equivalent to the RX 7900 XTX? ›

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 Super performance and conclusions

The price brings it in line with AMD's Radeon RX 7900 XTX and everything will depend how readily you can pick up RTX 4080 Supers for around $1000. In terms of performance, this was never going to be significantly more than the RTX 4080.

What is the minimum power supply for the RX 7900 XTX? ›

The following are recommended minimum requirements for installation of AMD Radeon™ RX 7900 XTX graphics cards: • PC with at least one PCI-Express x16 graphics slot available on the motherboard. Minimum 800W system power supply • Minimum of 8 GB of system memory, 16GB is recommended.

Is 7900XTX worth it in 2024? ›

The RX 7900 XTX is an excellent high-end graphics card in 2024 and excels across the board in not only 1440p but also 4K with confident performance in the latest games. If you want true 4K gaming with the added VRAM when compared to the likes of the similarly priced RTX 4080 Super then this GPU delivers on all fronts.

What is the peak power draw of the RX 7900 XTX? ›

The GPU is operating at a frequency of 1929 MHz, which can be boosted up to 2498 MHz, memory is running at 2500 MHz (20 Gbps effective). Being a dual-slot card, the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX draws power from 2x 8-pin power connectors, with power draw rated at 355 W maximum.

Which has better ray tracing performance 7900 XTX or 4080? ›

With the ultra preset, the 7900 XTX and RTX 4080 are neck and neck at 1080p and 1440p. However, at 4K, the Radeon GPU pulls ahead, boasting a 17% performance lead. Introducing ray tracing changes the dynamics, putting the 4080 in the lead by 18% at 1080p, 15% at 1440p, and 12% at 4K.

Is RX 7900 XTX good for 4K gaming? ›

The RX 7900 XTX averages 62.5 fps across these demanding 4K game benchmarks compared to 80 fps for the RTX 4090. That's an incredible result given the RTX 4090 costs $500 more. This level of 4K gaming performance is a first for any Radeon GPU.

Is 850W enough for RX 7900 XT? ›

According to AMD's own specs the recommended minimum PSU for running a RX7900XT in your PC is 750 Watts PSU. But AMD recommends a minimum PSU for running a RX 6700 XT in your PC is 650 Watts PSU. But I would still upgrade your PSU to one, at least, 850 Watts to prevent any power issues.

What is the thermal issue on AMD 7900 XTX? ›

AMD says it knows why some Radeon RX 7900 XTX graphics cards can overheat, forcing the performance to throttle. Apparently, a small batch of units have a faulty vapor chamber. Scott Herkleman, SVP and GM of AMD's Graphics Business Unit, discussed the root cause behind the thermal issues in an interview with PCWorld.

How much power does a 4080 use compared to a 7900 XTX? ›

Nvidia's RTX 4080 has a TDP of 320W, which overall lands it as the more efficient GPU versus the 7900 XTX at 355W. This has some clear benefits—such as in quieter performance and lower thermals.

What is the max power consumption of Radeon 7900 XTX? ›

Max power draw of the reference 7900 XTX is 360w, a whopping 40w less and hence why comparing an OC card to a reference card for the purpose of demonstrating the power efficiency of a given generation broadly is highly misleading: Click to expand...

How powerful is 7900 XTX? ›

AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX – Design and Features

The RX 7900 XTX, priced at $999, has 96 RDNA 3 compute units, 24GB of GDDR6 memory, and a game/boost clock of 2.3/2.5 GHz. This amounts to an estimated 61 shader teraflops of compute power.

What is the power limit for Red Devil 7900 XTX? ›

³Recommended power supply for AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX graphics card is minimum 900W or greater power supply with 12V output > 75A. Minimum recommended system power supply wattage is based on a PC configured with an AMD Ryzen 9 5900X processor plus typical power requirements of other system components.

What does the 7900xtx compare to? ›

The RX 7900 XTX is a testament to AMD's affinity for decking out its GPUs with more video memory. After all, this amount of VRAM pits it against the RTX 4090. However, using GDDR6 instead of GDDR6X makes it comparable to the RTX 4080 Super for gaming purposes.

Which is better, rtx 4090 or rx 7900 xtx? ›

In games where we could test with ray tracing and FSR or DLSS upscaling, at 1080p, the 7900 XTX was on average 27% slower, indicating a reasonable performance advantage for the RTX 4090, even at this lower resolution.

Is 4070 Ti better than 7900 XTX? ›

Although the 7900 XTX does outperform the 4070-Ti on paper, the 4070-Ti is more power efficient (quieter), has a broader feature set (RT/DLSS 3.0) and offers far better game compatibility (drivers).

Is the RX 7900 XT better than 4080? ›

AMD's card has more VRAM with higher bandwidth, but the RTX 4080 has almost double the graphics computing cores (though these are completely different from AMD's). The same goes for the architecture, with the AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT being based on RDNA 3 and the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 using Ada Lovelace.

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Name: Tish Haag

Birthday: 1999-11-18

Address: 30256 Tara Expressway, Kutchburgh, VT 92892-0078

Phone: +4215847628708

Job: Internal Consulting Engineer

Hobby: Roller skating, Roller skating, Kayaking, Flying, Graffiti, Ghost hunting, scrapbook

Introduction: My name is Tish Haag, I am a excited, delightful, curious, beautiful, agreeable, enchanting, fancy person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.