AMD Radeon R9-290X Specs & Benchmarks Leaked, is it a Titan Killer?

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Updated: September 24, 2013
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AMD fans have been holding their collective breath just waiting for something from AMD to come out and beat NVIDIA’s Titan, and if what we see on paper is true that time may just have arrived. AMD has flown out their hand-picked reviewers for an event in Hawaii where they have dumped huge amounts of cash in order to not only announce their new products, but to insure those members of the press get the correct and accurate information from AMD about them. I am sure Hawaii is nice this time of year and since the silicon is code-named Hawaii, why not?

It seems though that has also led to a few new leaks about AMD’s latest venture, the Radeon R9-290X will be surfacing in the near future and here is what we have heard thus far about it. The new Hawaii XT (GCN 2.0) R9-290X has 2816 stream processors, split among 44 clusters. Most likely we will see 64 ROPs (render output units), and around 176 TMUs (texture mapping units). The GPU should be clocked at around 900MHz, and there will be a fast 512-bit memory bus to GDDR5 RAM. The leaked benchmarks peg the Radeon R9-290X as equal or slightly faster than NVIDIA’s GTX Titan, and around 10% faster than the GTX 780; and if it’s priced right, it could put AMD back in the driving seat.

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AMD is also slated to release its new Graphics Core Next or GCN 2.0 technology sometime this week as well as chips based on GCN 2.0 including Hawaii, Hawaii Pro and Hawaii XT, all supposedly coming this October. Once the NDA lifts and actual cards are around all these new technologies can be torn apart and explained, but for now we at least know for sure AMD is coming back on the attack. From the photos that have been leaked there are 16 memory chips, which would indicate that the R9-290X has a 512-bit memory bus to 4GB of GDDR5 RAM (rather than 384-bit, which is usually associated with 12 chips). The die size of the chip (which is presumed to be the Hawaii XT) is estimated to be around 424 millimeters square larger than the Radeon 7970′s GPU (Tahiti XT), but smaller than GTX Titan’s GK110.

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So far this all sounds like solid stuff and if what we see from the leaks is real, the R9-290X posts up to 10% better performance than the Titan. From previous leaks, we believe that the Hawaii XT has up to 2816 stream processors, split among 44 clusters, with up to 64 ROPs and 176 TMUs. It will almost certainly be built by TSMC on its 28nm process. The chip will be clocked at around 900MHz, but there’s been nothing yet on the memory bus speed, but we can assume it will be fast. The graphs we show below are from leaks around the world and In the benchmarks below the graphic card’s name has been blanked out, but it’s probably the R9-290X, but it could also be the Hawaii Pro-based R9-290 (which will probably be quite similar to the X, just clocked slower). If this does pan out to be true, which I hope it does, AMD will once again move forward on the chessboard.

Being that the new card seems to be just a bit faster than the current Titan it seems that he who has the best price will be the dominator for at least a few months and we all know AMD usually is the price point contender. If AMD continues in that trend, I am sure they will see a huge rise in their sales and new blood never hurts a waning market. Industry sources state that a $600 price point is set for the R9-290X, which would put it well below the GTX Titan’s $1,000 price tag, and cheaper even than the $650 GTX 780. NVIDIA is not one to stand around on laurels and you can be damn sure they stay in the game and AMD will force them to lower prices and offer more, which in turn is only good for the end user who has to shell out the cash to buy them. Maxwell Keplar’s successor will hit the shelves in 2014, but for right now AMD can be in a pretty sweet spot for the next few months and holiday season. When the cards do hit the market we will begin the actual testing and reviews of them and I do not think we have long to wait. Thanks for reading tech Of Tomorrow, AMD fans today is the dawn of a new era for the desktop GPU, welcome home.

Source: Extreme Tech 

  • Iggy

    Lets see how this goes, could be very interesting

  • Guest

    GREAT SUCCESS… Will they release other cards too? like a $500 and $400 version?

    • Tammis

      Yeah. 240,250,260,280,280x, 290 and 290x.
      The 290 without X costs $399

  • doge

    my body is ready but my wallet is not

    • Cody McCormick

      My body is telling me yeeess!!! But my wallet! My wallet is telling me noooo!

      • andre tapiau

        sounds like steam sales

  • koustavsuny

    awesome !

  • Thuan Duong

    will the price rock on the sky?

  • gs

    how much power will it take

    • Matti Alexander Christensen

      presumed 300 watt TDP, takes one 6 and one 8 pin connector.

  • Keven Brochu

    Waiting to see if they AMD release new cards in the ~$250 price range. I’m planning a build for a friend for november, and I’d like to see if there will be better options than the GTX 760 and Radeon 7950 at this price range

  • Brayan Stiven Garcia

    hola

  • Firemane

    Mmm… think i’ll just stick with my 650 TI boost. My wallet cannot handle how fast these video cards are being released. @_@

    • Guest

      SLI it and you wont regret it.

  • Michael Herron

    Any money I make goes towards school for the next 5 years. :l I just.. I want things..

    • ChainedTank

      Same here >:l Want it so bad, will kill mom, or dad, or both.

  • NVIDIAfanboy

    AMD sucks. NVIDIA rocks. Losers get out of the scene if you won’t admit that I’m right.

    • Yolo

      What about that price to performance ratio? XD

    • Rick Lott

      are you sure about that i had a gtx 550 ti and when nvidia’s driver
      320.18 came out it fried my video card and basically they told me it was my own fault… go AMD

      • Carlos Isaac Gonzalez Quintos

        ive had 2 nvidia cards fried too in the past but never had issues with amd gpus i guess just bad luck with nvidia, imo amd has given me all i wanted so far these past 8 years and no issues ever its why i went from nvidia and intel to amd not to mention the great prices they have on their products for great performance only trip on them was the new fx 9000 cpus that was too overpriced but i heard it was because sellers highed up the price it was supposed to be around 400 usd and not 1000 usd but its not amds fault it was the dealers fault

    • NVIDIA FAN BOY KILLER

      lol nvidia fangay pussy i am running NVIDIA and as soon 280x comes out iTS GETTING IN MY PC AND ITS NOT GOING OUT SOON

    • The Jackal

      Look, the end of the day, just remember that neither suck. Would you rather go and play an XBOX instead?

  • Koobecaf Gnikcuf

    If it is a 20nm processed video card…… then nvidia can definetlly have a relief

  • Tom

    PLEASE BE GOOD AMD!!

  • Kevin Price

    I could see AMD even try to push a $550 price mark. They may be mass producing these GPU’s like crazy and really drive the price down.

    • Azix

      $550 is still a whole hell of a lot to pay for a GPU that will be outdated in a few months. Can’t figure why people seem to think its a good deal. That’s more than the cost of almost my entire PC, including an i7 4770 and ASUS gryphon board, 16 GB of RAM. That cannot be anywhere near reasonable

      • nfjd

        let’s see you play battlefield 4 in decent setting without one

        • Azix

          lol. Odds are I can play bf4 decently with my 5770. BF4 recommended is HD 7870 or gtx 660. I do like max settings and I always operate with minimum things I want from the hardware. I also want to be able to hold on to the card for years since I don’t live in a place where its easy to just sell and replace. If it were I might not care since an upgrade would be cheaper after selling a card.

        • Smartass

          A better response would be, “Let’s see you play Star Citizen at a decent setting without one.”

      • Brendin

        Just because in a few months a new product comes out in a few months doesn’t mean your new one is outdated. The release of a new card doesn’t magically make your old one run bad on current games (I know you didn’t say that I’m just twisting your words like everyone else on them interwebzzzz lolzzzzzz)…… My 5750 has lasted me 4 years for $140 only because I don’t have the money to spend and it runs hardly anything on max settings at 1440×900 over 30fps.
        I wish I would have spent the $500 on the 5970. I would be able to run all my current games at 1080p 40+fps max settings and still be able to skip these next gen cards.

        Also a $300+ graphics card, 4gb of ram and a i3/i5 will outrun a 5770 16bg of ram and an i7. In a gaming environment at least. Obviously I don’t know what you do on a day to day basis.

        • Brendin

          Just because in a few months a new product comes out doesn’t mean your new one is outdated. ******

        • Azix

          it becomes outdated at the price you paid for it. Hence it’s important for that price point to not have been inflated more than it needed to be.

          • Marcus Barnett

            At damn near half the price of a titan for damn near the power of the titan this card will be far far from outdated. To think that could happen to a card at this tier with that price, it could only go outdated one the titan itself does and a new gpu wont do that anytime soon.

  • Joe997

    Capitalism! Welcome back AMD, although i am an Nvidia user. Hope AMD can keep up for the coming gens, would like to upgrade my 680m with less than a limb in the future.

  • Rick Lott

    hey amd can you make a killer cpu. now please

    • SchrodingersCat_

      They have the ability, they seem to be moving towards the laptop and console market though. I wish they would though man! FX-8450? Beats i5-4670k? That would be cool!

      • Alex Carnifex Easter

        Did we forget the FX-9590?

        • Leo

          Dosen’t count. All they did was clock up an 8350. What would be nice is a new cpu from amd all together. Not a rebrand.

  • Errick

    How come AMD can make pretty good GPU’s but lack in CPU? I have both an AMD and Intel cpu based systems and the cpu’s are kinda eh.

    • Carlos Isaac Gonzalez Quintos

      the fx 8350 isnt that bad and it costs around 160 usd in some places i dont think its bad at all, it may not be the fastest cpu out there but for the price it has outstanding performance imo its a high end cpu and with a good overclock can beat a i7 3770k on stock setting and even with its turbo boost enabled the i7 3770k beats the fx 8350 when it overclocks though

      • dale

        have 8350. its fantastic. you can make the 8350 faster then the 3770k

  • Azix

    $600. Right back to the old GPU prices before AMD put out the HD3870. Ah well. This means the 7870 replacement can cost a good deal and that’s not even the card I want.

  • http://www.indraemc.blogspot.com/ Indra Emc

    hmm, a little bit slower compare to TITAN but only cost HALF of GTX Titan, and of course it beats others Nvidia card.

  • Shinkueagle

    Oh yeah! I have been saving up for the past 6 months on a new card and if $600-$700 can buy me a beast that can annihilate the Titan.. SIGN ME UP!!! =)

  • Babatunde Omodayo

    AMD bring this fantastic card out and a fresh new never settle bundle! Nvidia will cry!! :P

  • Max Wagner

    finally i got my gtx 770 2months ago, so i need nothing new, only a i7 3770k :D got the i5 [email protected] but 4 cores isnt enough :)

    • Helpful Dude

      Lol. i7 3770K is a quad-core :D. Though, it’s hyper threaded.

    • Keven Brochu

      The i7 will do nothing more for gaming over your i5. Maybe a gain 2-3 FPS in a few games… Not worth it.

      • Max Wagner

        but, sometimes im livestreaming…. and i need this hyperthreaded cpu

        • Leo

          Then get an 8350. it outperforms the 3930 in streaming. If you need more threads, get amd. if you need more ipc, get intel.

  • Mike

    now now, im just waiting for the 799X series to drop in price, MUA HA HA HA HA AH

  • Tommachan

    stay involved and try again later… nice try amd

  • simonb

    290x =D if it cost around 600$ in my country it will be in my pc as soon as it is lounched =D already have over 2k reserved for gpu but not going to spent if its not worth it

  • Lafreux

    It’s a ”no need” for me atr this time. I just bought 2 EVGA GTX760 superclocked ACX. They should have been faster on the producing!

  • Luiz Carlos Degrande Jr.

    Eren Jäger.

  • David Padilla

    As a more of a Nvidia fan, I’m glad AMD is stepping up since competition is always a good thing. Pushes pricing and performance to favor the consumers. I’ve had good experience with AMD in the past.

  • Dave

    Hardly a Titan killer. The main reason anyone would buy a Titan is to get two of them and run in SLI, getting world-beating performance (albeit for a rather crazy price tag). Considering CrossfireX’s abysmal microstuttering problems, Titan SLI will continue to be the top-end solution for enthusiasts.

    It’s good to see AMD stepping up their game, but they have a while to go yet. The fact that their next-gen cards will finally catch up to Nvidia’s last-gen cards is not exactly something to jump up and down excited over.

  • snake8989

    1 GHz edition please?

  • TyloriusMaximus

    Nvidia is in serious trouble if they don’t drop there prices but i am always cautious about recommending amd. my 7950, 6770, and 6950 all stopped working just after my 1 year warranty. my gt 8800, 570, 460 and 560 ti have never broken (when i say my i mean my family)

  • Varren

    will the rx 290 be able to crossfire with the 7970 ‘s and 7990′s?

    • bloodtaker

      doubtful as its different chips the r 280x will though