AMD confirms its next-gen Zen 6-based Medusa CPUs will launch in 2027, powered by next-gen Zen 6 cores, new RDNA 5 GPU, and ...
With a huge GPU but few CPU cores, the new AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 388 could be ideal for high-end gaming handhelds, laptops, and ...
Last week, AMD released version 25.10.2 of its Adrenalin driver package for Radeon GPUs. It seemed like a relatively routine ...
The first RDNA cards popped up in 2019, with RX 6000 series GPUs featuring RDNA 2 architecture. RX 6000 GPUs launched in 2020 ...
The PS5 Pro's GPU, sometimes referred to as "Viola," is exclusive to the console and, therefore, not available for custom PCs. Instead, it's a child of collaboration between Sony and AMD. Consequently ...
We've heard about "GFX1150" and "GFX1151" codes before, but now AMD is openly referring to them in ROCm commits. The new posts are based on the first Strix Point silicon that's called "STRIX1," which ...
As Tom's Hardware originally reported, AMD pulled support for RDNA 1/2 GPUs "in order to focus on optimizing and delivering ...
AMD's new RDNA architecture is a major advancement over and above GCN. If it delivers the improvements AMD has promised, it'll be the company's most important GPU launch since 2012. Let's take a look ...
Gaming Laptops Best graphics card for laptops in 2025: the mobile GPUs I'd want in my next gaming laptop Graphics Cards The latest AMD RDNA 5 rumours are complicated but it looks like there really is ...
The dark satanic rumour mill has manufactured a hell on earth yarn saying that AMD is rumoured to develop a high-end RDNA 4 graphics processing unit (GPU) featuring up to 32GB of VRAM. If true, it ...
According to the latest rumor, AMD might implement a completely new Ray Tracing (RT) engine with its upcoming RDNA 4 architecture GPUs that are expected to debut with the Radeon RX 8000 graphics card ...
As we near the end of 2024, small morsels of information are starting to hit the rumor mill for the next generation of gaming GPUs. AMD has had RDNA 3 GPUs since December of 2022, and it appears that ...