AMD Radeon R9 380

GCN 3 (Tonga)
Architecture
Midrange
Product Tier
1792
Shader Cores
32
ROPs
112
TMUs
No RT
Ray Tracing
2 GB
Memory
GDDR5
Memory Type
176 GB/s
Bandwidth
190 W
TDP
GPU Snapshot
Release date:Jun 18, 2015Price at Launch:$199
Type:DesktopArchitecture:GCN 3 (Tonga)
Generation:Radeon R9 300 seriesProduct Tier:Midrange
VRAM Capacity:2 GBTotal Board Power:190 W
Core Configuration
Shader Cores:1792TMUs:112
ROPs:32L2 Cache:512 KB
Memory
VRAM Capacity:2 GBMemory Type:GDDR5
Memory Speed:5.5 GbpsMemory Bus:256-bit
Bandwidth:176 GB/s
Graphics Processing
Base Clock:0.97 GHzFP32 Throughput:3.48 TFLOPs
Ray Tracing:NoProcess Size:28nm
Process Name:TSMC 28nmDie Size:366 mm²
Power & Connectivity
Total Board Power:190 WPower Connectors:2x 6-pin
Bus Interface:PCIe 3.0 x16HDMI Support:HDMI 1.4b
DisplayPort Support:DP 1.2aDSC:No
Max Displays:6
Media & Software Support
DirectX Support:12Shader Model:6.5
Vulkan Version:1.2OpenGL Version:4.6

Reviews and Ratings

81

Average Score

Based on 7 reviews

7.8

User Score

Based on 180 reviews

Reviewers Liked

  • Excellent 1080p and 1440p performance
  • Dead Silent

Reviewers Didn't Like

  • Still consumes plenty of power

The Best Graphics Cards: Nvidia vs. AMD at Every Price Point: Important to note, all the pricing information below comes from Newegg and excludes sales. If pricing in your country or region differs from the Newegg's pricing in the US, which it likely will, then please draw your own conclusions based on the...

By TechSpot on

Finally, we have the R9 380 at $200, a price point AMD has previously smothered with products. For the same price as the R9 285, the R9 380 was on average 6% faster and just 8% slower than the R9 280X while matching the GTX 960.

By TechSpot on
80

The Sapphire R9 380 Nitro 4GB is a solid option that delivers compelling 1080P performance for the price, and decent 1440P numbers with reduced image quality settings. The similarly-priced GTX960 solutions are competitive alternatives, so the purchasing decision boils down to varied aspects such as the games you play, FreeSync or G-Sync support, and possible multi-GPU options with your motherboard.

By KitGuru on
80

The R9 380 represents an attack on the more conservative and efficient approach of Nvidia's GeForce GTX 960, and on the whole, the AMD card does its job well. It's slightly faster than the GTX 960 in our tests and holds a steady if small advantage at...

By Trusted Reviews on
88

MSI R9 380 Gaming 4G is a card for 1080p and 1440p gaming. It can run cool and silent any task you want to throw to it. The TwinFrozr V cooling system is powerful and quiet in any situation thanks to its well-designed heatsink and 2 types of blades, a Traditional one that maximizes downwards airflow and a Dispersion one that brings more air from outside.

By Review Studio on
80

Unfortunately, while the faster clock speed and extra memory give it a slight edge over the R9 285, there’s actually very little to differentiate the R9 380 from its predecessor now that AMD’s driver optimisations have made their way to the older cards. If you’ll be sticking to 1,920x1,080 or 2,560x1,440 gaming for the foreseeable future, with no plans to make the jump to 4K, the R9 380 will be more than sufficient for playing new games, but if you only recently upgraded to a 200-series graphics card there’s no reason to make the jump to AMD's new model.

By ExpertReviews on
90

The simple fact is not everyone can afford the high-end AMD Fury cards or NVIDIA’s 980 / 980 Ti cards. For that reason many gamers and enthusiasts are looking to spend in the $200-$250 price range. This gives them the best performance for their money. This card will be more than powerful enough to handle the latest titles at 1080p. Moving up to 1440p you will have to turn settings down a good bit. When it comes to 4K I would not recommend this card, even with its 4GB of VRAM 4K is a little out of reach if you want decent quality. Keep in mind this card was never made with 4K gaming in mind though.

By Think Computers on
82

Sapphire's R9 380 Nitro is designed to cover the needs of the mainstream gamer making use of a 1080p panel. However, the Sapphire R9 380 Nitro 4GB is strangely placed, as the 4GB of video memory holds a price premium over 2GB equivalents to the tune of around £20, or £180 compared to £160. That premium could make it a tougher to lure in mainstream gamers since Sapphire itself recommends the R9 380 Nitro for "1080P gaming at high detail levels in most games", yet 4GB of VRAM is arguably overkill for 1080p. A 2GB variation of the R9 380 Nitro would likely go down a storm and give it a much-needed value boost against Nvidia's GTX 960 which starts at £150.

By Bit-Tech on
70

AMD’s Radeon R9 380 may be a retread of last year’s Radeon R9 285, but with a higher core clock speed and twice the memory, this MSI version manages to perform a bit better than Nvidia’s GTX 960, making it a good choice for gamers with 1080p, 1440p, or 2,560x1,600 screens.

By Computer Shopper on

Overall though, it's good news for AMD: it has two attractive options in a very important market sector, offering 3GB and 4GB cards in a market where VRAM allocation is becoming much more important than relatively minor differences in overall performance.

By EuroGamer on

Près d'une année après l'introduction des premières cartes graphiques de la famille GeForce GTX 900, bâties autour de la technologie Maxwell de seconde génération, Nvidia en introduit enfin une déclinaison sous la barre des 200€. Cette GeForce GTX 950...

International Review By Hardware France on

In den letzten zwei Monaten war der Grafikkartenmarkt nach den umfassenden Produktvorstellungen von AMD so aktiv wie schon lange nicht mehr. AMD hat das gesamte Produktportfolio des Jahres 2015 vorgestellt, wobei von günstig bis sehr teuer für jeden...

International Review By ComputerBase on

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