AMD just lacks a buzz or excitement right now. So many people here like to point out that not many people buy the Titans or even the 980 Tis, but what gets lost in that is all that is the GTX 960s that Nvidia sells because gamers see Nvidia getting praised everywhere (for the 980 ti). Excitement around the high-end products creates a halo around the entire lineup that pulls in low information consumers. AMD is missing this.
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good posting
Ya, that's true. I was expecting a price of $449, maybe $499 but $649 is way too high. The other thing is they are putting the best binned Fiji XT chips inside but apparently have a 175W hard power limit? They should have at least allowed the full 225W power limit.
Honestly, they should have given this card a dual personality. Why not add a 6+8-pin connector and force it to run at 175W power limit on BIOS 1 but have BIOS 2 (Uber BIOS) that unlocked full potential for 250-300W TDP? This way someone could easily pay $649 for the best binned Fiji XT GPU and slap their own water-block/AIO CLC but get benefit of the least leaky Fiji XT chips.
Good idea & also good posting - why not give the option to turbo up past 175? Let people put their own coolers on. Kinda plays into what poofyhairguy said about letting customers feel like they got 1-up on the market; something special where you can "unlock" more performance
So what was AMD's actual purpose for Fury X? With Nano now at the same price point, even if it comes in at say 85-95% performance it is, in my opinion, far more appealing to the general buyer than Fury X.
There's always a clash of the titans at the top of the GPU food chain. The winner builds the image of brand superiority, which does, well, exactly as stated in my first quote here, "pulls in low information consumers" to buy that brand
I think some of the problem is AMD self-delusion- they really thought the Fury X was a better GPU than the best Nvidia has. If they could be a little more honest with themselves maybe the first Fury card was the X2 JUST so they could steal the "best performing single card" Halo. An X2 with watercooling would have highlighted all the best parts of the Fury X (crossfire performance) while giving AMD a very obvious excuse for its overclocking deficiency. It just feels like a case of misjudging what they have and why cards sell in this market.
I LOVE the idea of making this architecture an X2 type. The small physical dimensions, low power and noise make it easy to carry over into an X2 design - add in the water cooler and it would be an awesome buy and take the performance crown.
Instead, it was R9 Nano, 30% faster than a GTX 970 Mini! 200% the price!!!!!!!!
Rather than R9 Fury X Nano, 95% of the Fury X performance. Same Price!
Most people believed this would be a cheaper product due to the positioning and marketing of R9 Nano. It was a far more premium product than originally anticipated due to stupid comparisons to vastly cheaper products.
Haha yeah, well their comparison makes me wonder if it's really going to be deliverying 90-something % of Fury X's performance - I mean we have yet to see real benchmarks and clockspeeds.
Now as everyone has said, price is too high.
What really grabs my attention is the 970 ITX comparison:
Their comparison showing it being, in AMD's BEST-CASE SCENARIO, Fury Nano ~30% faster than a downclocked 970, where GTX970 has been going on sale for $300.
This benchmark taking place at 4K, which I'm guessing 3.5 gb 970 is not the strongest at...? And certainly few peope are buying a GTX 970 to play at 4K.
The comparison just seems all kinda of wrong.
Most people spending $650 want top-of-the-line performance. I suppose I don't understand the SFF pc market enough, I don't see where you'd want to build a box where physical space it at an absolute premium and you can't even fit a mid-sized tower. But you're willing to spend $650 on graphics?
Aren't most people spending that $650+ on graphics pairing it with either large 1080p TV's, or 27++ inch monitors, or dual monitors, or 3 monitors? I guess I am having a hard time understanding the premium for space that a few inches of GPU PCB represents.
Again when I think of the size and efficiency of nano, it makes me think it's better off as an X2 or CF type card - then you can gear it towards performance users without drawing 400+ watts.
A lot of AMD vs. nVidia here. I have gone TI4400 -> 6800GT -> X850XTPE -> 7900GT -> GTX285 -> 7970 -> 980TI. So mostly NV but I've dipped into the red side. I think half the reason I'm back on the NV side though is I just like the interface of their drivers more. A lot more. Couldn't stand CCC. Also my 7970 was the loudest card I've ever had. I put it under water immediately; my cooler was obnoxious.
I think with some of their lineups, AMD has made themselves known, to the "low-information consumers," as the brand that's hotter and louder, but cheaper. IMO their translates to AMD being the choice of budget gamers, which I think is consistent with AMD overall. Maybe Nano can help change this stigma (when lower-end versions are released)?
At the top end, I see Fury X trading blows with the 980 TI at the same price. But the 980 TI clocks like a beast to greater highs, and does so without needing to install the water cooler. When I'm spending $650+ I want the best performance and 980 TI does this with overclocking. Fury X is clocked aggressively with about no headroom left, which for me takes away all the fun of water cooling. For me, this go-round, my $$$ went to the green team with the 980 TI and I know from looking at signatures that there's a ton of people in this boat.
I cross my fingers and hope for AMD that they do well however and their investment in HBM pays off.