So we are looking at 649 for the Fury X and 549 for the Fury. No price on the Fury Nano yet (unless I just didn't here it). So What do you guys think, worth the buy?
I don't want to see benchmarks from AMD. We want trusted benchmarks comparing to all other GPU's not just specific ones they want to use.
Like I said in the live feed thread. I need benchmarks in actual games, not 3dmark and more importantly, they at least need to acknowledge their driver support has been garbage and lie to me that they plan to turn it around. Give me that much. Right now I'm still leaning toward a 980 ti, I'm sure amd will reveal more tonight at the pc gaming conference so I'll wait for that.
Benchmarks will come. If anyone is set on buying the Fury without seeing any numbers, well, you're silly!
I'm honestly more concerned with driver support. I have no doubt the card will be equal to, if not faster than the 980 ti. I need to focus on upgrading my mobo/cpu/ram next anyway now that I think about it. This cpu is a bottleneck.
true, AMD benchmarks mean absolutely 0 . I'm with you tehre. So that's $640 which will no doubt translate to £600 And will I require a fridge to cool this one ?
I actually like to Nano more than the other two With all the hype AMD has put out surrounding HBM, for me to buy, I need it to beat the Titan X by more than just a little.
when AMD put Fury and Fury X alone in the storage, both got bored and somehow decided to mated, and then Nano is born from that incest. btw its not Fury Nano, its R9 Nano.
The Fury/X has to beat the 980Ti or come bloody close for it to succeed. Prices are going to be the same if not more expensive than it here. That and AMD's driver past puts them in a tricky situation for me. I wonder if the likes of MSI and Gigabyte are allowed to put a custom cooler on the Fury X?
Why would you put a custom cooler on a reference card that already comes with a liquid cooling solution? The 295x2's liquid cooling is supposedly very cool and quiet. Much different than my loud toaster ovens (290x crossfire).
Literally nothing is suspicious for what they did today. This was nothing more than a product introduction. It's completely typical for corporations. Don't think so? Look at Apple, Google, MS, or any large company's conferences. They tell you what is new, what they are working on, prices, and release dates. The reviews follow once product is on the shelves.