Fan Noise is nice I heard on the Tri-X, quieter somehow than AMD's reference Fury-X. I was interested in the FuryX and Tri-X until I saw the Nano. What idiotic thing did AMD do to F up the Nano?
Not the card itself. The card itself I think is great.
That's why I'm still interested. AMD pitting a $650 card vs a $320 dollar card. WITHOUT saying the card is $650. Is highly misleading. That really upset a lot of consumers. A LOT of people were highly interested in the Nano actually. That alone cost AMD a ton of people. I've never seen people lose interest in a product so fast.
Then besides that, why would they not say "This is the Quiet Air Version of Fury X, 90% of the performance, $650 card". It just makes FAR MORE SENSE to state the card is that. It's the same chip, as Fury X. Instead, AMD keeps making references to GTX 970/980 and then prices the card above that range, oh, and drops the Fury/X moniker and just completely differentiates it with "Fury Nano". We're GPU enthusiasts, we understand Fury X and R9 Nano have the same chip.
On other places, where people are just GAMERS. They don't understand that. They see the R9 Nano as a chip on the level of a GTX 970/980 card, but really really freaking expensive.
I don't know how else to explain it other than with this analogy if you want my opinion on how gamers see this launch:
the R9 Nano launch (since it was pushed at e3 a lot of gamers did see that and were interested in the r9 nano) is like going to a dealership to get a car.
The dealer walks in, tells you he has a great car for you. It's better than the Honda Civic, AND the Honda Accord. Faster, sportier, smaller, it's the best.
The only catch? It'll be out 1 month from now. So you wait a month, get excited for this fast car. Then the dealer tells you how great it is, then says "It's the m3 BMW!!!!! FULL PRICE!!!!"
You were talking Honda range... and he pulls out an m3 BMW on you....
I don't know how to make it any more clear.