Buenas:
Ahí va un buen tocho ..........
Update#2: The AMD Radeon R9 380X officially launches in a few hours. You can find the review round-up within this page.
Update#1: We have received an update regarding the price of the Radeon R9 380X. According to official info, the Radeon R9 380X will retail at an official price of $229 US (reference models). The overclocked models will retail at a price of $249 US. We will be looking at several overclocked models from AMD AIBs tomorrow but those looking to save some bucks can go for reference models.
With a day left in the launch of AMD’s latest Radeon R9 380X graphics card, there was bound to be a leak that showed us the performance numbers and that has just happened. Straight from Chinese sources, we have our hands on the first and latest performance numbers of the Antigua XT based Radeon R9 380X graphics card and some technical slides.
[LEFT]

AMD Radeon R9 380X Performance Unveiled – Beats The 4 GB GeForce GTX 960 Models, Packs Great 1080P Performance
Just a few second ago, we were announcing the official price and specifications for the card and now we are getting a first look at the performance numbers. But before we get into the performance bits, let’s take a small recap of the specifications and pricing information for the Radeon R9 380X graphics card.
First thing we want to confirm is that the Radeon R9 380X is going to hit retail for an official MSRP of $229 US while overclocked variants will cost $249 US. This confirms what we have been saying for months that the card will actually be placed in the sweet spot tier for mainstream gamers which has remain untouched by NVIDIA and AMD so far with a proper graphics solution. AMD currently has two cards near this price range, the Radeon R9 380 ($199 US) and the Radeon R9 390 ($329 US). On the NVIDIA front, we are looking at the GeForce GTX 960 ($199 US) and the GeForce GTX 970 ($299 US). Now all of these cards compete against each other well but there’s a big gap left between them. For instance, the R9 390 is much faster than a R9 380 and the same could be said when comparing a GTX 970 to the GTX 960 graphics card. AMD will fill up the gap with their $229 – 249 US solutions, the Radeon R9 380X.

Packed with AMD Technologies
- VSR (Virtual Super Resolution): Get quality that rivals 1440p, even on a 1080p display while playing your favorite games thanks to AMD’s VSR.
- AMD Eyefinity Technology: Expand your territory and customize your field of vision. Connect up to four displays on a single GPU for dynamic, panoramic multi-screen gaming. You’ll get an expansive experience that’s truly out of sight.
- VULKAN: Support for this next-gen API for stunning, real-time graphics—giving the new wave of games direct control of GPU acceleration for max performance and predictability.
- DirectX 12: Microsoft’s new technology enables great performance and dramatically improved GPU and CPU multiprocessing and multithreading performance – thanks to Async Shaders and Multi-threaded Command Buffer Recording – for more efficient rendering of richer and more complex scenes.
- AMD Crossfire Technology: Scale up to four GPUs with AMD CrossFire and amplify your system’s graphics processing capability.
- AMD Freesync Technology: Maintain extreme frame rates while playing the most demanding games, without frame-tearing or video stuttering, using AMD’s open-standard dynamic refresh rate technology that automatically synchronizes your GPU output with AMD FreeSync technology-enabled DisplayPort monitors.
- AMD LiquidVR Technology: AMD is making VR as comfortable as possible by lowering the motion-to-photo latency. Enhance gaming realism and maintain ultra-immersive VR presence. Enjoy liquid-smooth visual performance and ultra-high frame rates and cross over to the other side of realistic virtual environments and interaction.
-
Specifications for the Radeon R9 380X include the latest GCN 1.2 core which has only been featured on the new Fiji and Tonga cards. The Radeon R9 380X packs 32 compute units with 64 stream processors on each CU. Total number of stream processors on the card are 2048 SPs, 128 texture mapping units and 32 raster operation unit that are featured on the Antigua XT die. Antigua is a new name for Tonga which was featured on the Radeon R9 285 graphics card and the mobility chips that include Radeon R9 M295X and Radeon R9 M395X. Antigua is only currently featured on the Radeon R9 380 graphics card but the full version will be available to consumers in the form of the Radeon R9 380X graphics card. The Radeon R9 380X comes with clock speeds of 970 MHz standard clock and up to 1000 MHz boost clock. The card is configured with 4 GB of GDDR5 memory that operates along a 256-bit bus interface and clocked at a frequency of 5.7 GHz that pumps out 182.4 GB/s bandwidth. Factory overclocked cards are expected to breach the 1 GHz core clock and further boost the memory clock up to 6.00 GHz with bandwidth of 192.00 GB/s. The Antigua XT has a peak compute performance of 4.00 TFLOPs in single precision and 0.25 TFLOPs in double precision work loads.
[LEFT]

The card being based on the latest GCN 1.2 iteration which is the same GCN (Graphics Core Next) revision as the Fiji graphics core is fully compliant with features like Color Compression, Vulkan API support and DirectX 12 API support. The card packs 8 ACE units (Asynchronous Compute Engines) which allows tasks to be submitted and processed by shader units inside GPUs simultaneous and asynchronously in a multi-threaded fashion. Furthermore, the card comes with the latest XDMA CrossFire technology that allows multi-GPU functionality between one or more cards of the same kind effectively. The card will feature a TDP of 190W but is expect to raise with factory overclocked options. Power is provided to several variants through a dual 6-Pin power input but some cards will require a 8+6 Pin configuration to meet the overclocking requirements.
AMD Radeon R9 380X Performance Numbers:
The Radeon R9 380X is an interesting card as it bests every card beneath it or close to it. The card is not going to compete against the $299+ graphics card and neither the sub-$200 market. It has a market of its own and the only graphics card NVIDIA has in this price range are the 4 GB models of their GeForce GTX 960 which are quite a bit slower than the Radeon R9 380X as the official AMD benchmarks put it. But from a non-official view, we can expect similar results as the Radeon R9 380X is a really beefed up graphics card with tons of graphics power available on it. The Radeon R9 380X uses the same memory compression techniques used on Maxwell architecture to conserve bandwidth but still has loads of bandwidth available for the GPU and a bigger bus interface of 256-bit compared to 128-bit bus interface. This means that the card will be able to keep up in AAA titles on higher resolution and boast better performance with added textures. AMD themselves advertise the Radeon R9 380X as a 1440P graphics card. It can run games on that resolution but most users will have to keep some settings toned down to get decent frame rates but 1080P gaming would be smooth as butter.
Some performance benchmarks straight from AMD show that the card can keep up 50+ FPS on several current generation titles at 1440P while maintaining a 60+ FPS rate on 1080P resolution. A table below shows off the di section of the performance numbers in better detail. Similarly in Firestrike, the R9 380X has a higher lead when compared to the R9 380 and GTX 960 but slower than the Radeon R9 290 / 390 graphics card. The card scores around 4100 Marks, in comparison, the R9 290 / 390 have a score of 4700+ 3DMarks while both the GTX 960 and R9 380 have scores of around 3500 marks.
AMD Radeon R9 380X DirectX 12 and 3DMark Performance Charts:


[LEFT]
AMD Radeon R9 380X “Antigua XT” Specifications:

[LEFT]
AMD Radeon R9 M295X / M395X
AMD Radeon R9 380
AMD Radeon R9 380X
AMD Radeon R9 390
AMD Radeon R9 390X
GPU Name
Tonga XT
Antigua Pro
Antigua XT
Hawaii Pro
Hawaii XT
Compute Units
32
28
32
60
64
Stream Processors
2048
1792
2048
2560
2816
ROPs
32
32
32
40
44
TMUs
128
112
128
160
176
Clock Speed
850 MHz
970 MHz
1000 MHz
1000 MHz
1050 MHz
VRAM
4 GB GDDR5
2 - 4 GB GDDR5
4 GB GDDR5
8 GB GDDR5
8 GB GDDR5
Memory Clock
5.45 GHz
5.5 - 5.7 GHz
5.7 GHz
6.0 GHz
6.0 GHz
Memory Bus
256-bit
256-bit
256-bit
512-bit
512-bit
Bandwidth
174 GB/s
176.2 / 182.4 GB/s
182.4 GB/s
384 GB/s
384 GB/s
Die Size
359mm²
359mm²
359mm²
438mm²
438mm²
TDP
~100W
190W
190W
275W
275W
Launch Price
Mobility GPU
$199 US
$229 US (Reference)
$329
$429
$249 US (Overclocked)
[/LEFT]
[/COLOR]
AMD Wants GeForce GTX 660 and GTX 760 Owners To Upgrade To Radeon R9 380X
It seems like AMD is directly competing against NVIDIA as they want NVIDIA’s old Kepler GPU owners to upgrade to their new R9 380X graphics card since NVIDIA didn’t brought anything interesting in this price market. In all the official benchmarks posted by AMD, it can be seen that the card is directly compared to GeForce GTX 760 and GTX 660 aside from the new GTX 960 graphics card. The GeForce GTX 660 and 760 launched back in 2012/2013 and were great cards for their performance.
Both of these cards entered the US$ 250 market but NVIDIA didn’t introduce a new part in this market with their Maxwell lineup. The 4 GB GTX 960 offers little improvement over the 2 GB variants hence NVIDIA might launch a faster GM204 Maxwell part in this market or they would have to loose the market share to AMD till their next-generation Pascal GPU arrives, in 2016.

AMD Radeon R9 380X Gaming Performance:
1080P Benchmarks (Max Details w/AAF)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 760
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960
AMD Radeon R9 380X
Alien Isolation
72 FPS
84 FPS
90 FPS
Batman Arkham Origins
68 FPS
60 FPS
73 FPS
Battlefield Hardline
76 FPS
90 FPS
98 FPS
Bioshock Infinite
70 FPS
76 FPS
96 FPS
Civilization Beyond Earth
62 FPS
86 FPS
95 FPS
Dragon Age Inqusition
65 FPS
80 FPS
85 FPS
Far Cry 4
56 FPS
70 FPS
72 FPS
GTA V
55 FPS
69 FPS
73 FPS
Metro Last Light
56 FPS
70 FPS
73 FPS
Shadow Of Mordor
58 FPS
65 FPS
78 FPS
Sleeping Dogs
50 FPS
58 FPS
70 FPS
Thief
45 FPS
70 FPS
78 FPS
Tomb Raider
60 FPS
73 FPS
80 FPS
Witcher 3
47 FPS
66 FPS
68 FPS
AMD Radeon R9 380X Firestrike Performance:
AMD Radeon HD 7850
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 760
AMD Radeon R9 270X
AMD Radeon R9 380
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960
AMD Radeon R9 380X
3DMark Firestrike (1080P)
4500 Marks
4700 Marks
5850 Marks
5970 Marks
7300 Marks
7500 Marks
8180 Marks
3DMark Firestrike (1440P)
2100 Marks
2200 Marks
2870 Marks
2900 Marks
3500 Marks
3550 Marks
4100 Marks
[/COLOR]
[/LEFT]
[/COLOR]
[/LEFT]
[/COLOR]
[/LEFT]