AMD's first Radeon Vega graphics card isn't for you, and gamers may be waiting a while

Still waiting for (consumer) Vega.

Nvidia’s not the only graphics card maker with “FE” cards anymore—but the “F” in AMD’s debut Radeon Vega card stands for “frontier” rather than “founders,” and it definitely isn’t for PC gamers. In fact, the one tidbit that is relevant for gamers may disappoint, as it seems likely that consumer versions of Vega are further off than expected.

After months of teasing, AMD finally took the wraps off an actual graphics card based on its hotly anticipated Vega graphics architecture during the company’s Financial Analyst Day livestream late Tuesday. An on-stage demo revealed the Radeon Vega Frontier Edition tearing through Sniper Elite 4 at between 60 and 70 frames per second at 4K resolution. It’s hard to draw an exact comparison since AMD didn’t reveal the graphics settings, but assuming the fidelity was very high, this particular Vega’s likely punching somewhere around the GeForce GTX 1080 to GTX 1080 Ti range.

radeon vega frontier edition hbcc AMD

Rise of the Tomb Raider limited to 2GB of memory, with AMD’s high-bandwidth cache controller off (left) and then on (right).

Another demo capped Rise of the Tomb Raider at 2GB of memory to show that the card’s radical high-bandwidth cache controller can significantly increase minimum and average frame rates in VRAM-constrained scenarios, as shown in the image above.

But don’t let those tidbits fool you. The Radeon Vega Founders Edition targets “data scientists, immersion engineers, and product designers” rather than PC gamers. Its whopping 16GB of ultra-fast HBM2 memory would be overkill otherwise.

radeon vega frontier edition stats AMD

The rest of AMD’s demos and tech specs focused solely on compute tasks rather than gaming scenarios, comparing the Vega Frontier Edition against Nvidia’s data-center graphics options as opposed to its GeForce lineup. I won’t go into details since GPU-compute tasks aren’t PCWorld’s focus.

Beyond those brief compute-related specs, AMD didn’t reveal much that wasn’t already disclosed in January’s Radeon Vega technical preview, aside from the fact that it appears Frontier Edition models will be available with both traditional air cooling and Fury X-like closed-loop liquid cooling solutions. Oh, and Vega seems to need dual 8-pin power connectors, as you can see in the image below.

radeon vega 2 AMD

Vega vs. Fiji (read: Fury) in compute tasks.

Gamers patiently awaiting Vega will find a glint of relevant information lurking at the very bottom of Radeon boss Raja Koduri’s Vega Frontier Edition introduction post, though; namely, this paragraph:

“The Radeon Vega Frontier Edition graphics card is going to empower the pioneers creating the next generation of gaming experiences, but it does beg one question: Can you game on a Radeon Vega Frontier Edition? The answer is yes, absolutely. But because this graphics card is optimized for professional use cases (and priced accordingly), if gaming is your primary reason for buying a GPU, I’d suggest waiting just a little while longer for the lower-priced, gaming-optimized Radeon RX Vega graphics card. You’ll be glad you did.”

So the Vega Frontier Edition is going to be pricey—and with this developer-centric model launching in late June, it sounds like a consumer Radeon RX Vega card might not arrive until later (Only one model of consumer Vega, perhaps? Note the singular “card” in Koduri’s statement.)

The statement's a bit wishy-washy though. There’s a chance that a consumer Radeon Vega graphics card could be announced at Computex or E3 and launched before the Frontier Edition, but based off the wording in Koduri’s post, I wouldn’t bet on it. Vega’s indeed launching in the second quarter, as AMD promised, just (maybe, probably?) not the version that hordes of gamers are waiting for.

The wait continues—though by the end of the year even AMD’s Ryzen-based APUs will come packing Vega GPU cores..

radeon vega AMD

A Radeon Vega Frontier Edition in the hands of Raja Koduri.

Join the newsletter!

Or

Sign up to gain exclusive access to email subscriptions, event invitations, competitions, giveaways, and much more.

Membership is free, and your security and privacy remain protected. View our privacy policy before signing up.

Error: Please check your email address.

Tags AMD

Keep up with the latest tech news, reviews and previews by subscribing to the Good Gear Guide newsletter.
Brad Chacos

Brad Chacos

PC World (US online)
Show Comments

Most Popular Reviews

Latest Articles

Resources

PCW Evaluation Team

Cate Bacon

Aruba Instant On AP11D

The strength of the Aruba Instant On AP11D is that the design and feature set support the modern, flexible, and mobile way of working.

Dr Prabigya Shiwakoti

Aruba Instant On AP11D

Aruba backs the AP11D up with a two-year warranty and 24/7 phone support.

Tom Pope

Dynabook Portégé X30L-G

Ultimately this laptop has achieved everything I would hope for in a laptop for work, while fitting that into a form factor and weight that is remarkable.

Tom Sellers

MSI P65

This smart laptop was enjoyable to use and great to work on – creating content was super simple.

Lolita Wang

MSI GT76

It really doesn’t get more “gaming laptop” than this.

Featured Content

Product Launch Showcase

Don’t have an account? Sign up here

Don't have an account? Sign up now

Forgot password?