AMD Radeon R9 Fury

AMD’s cut down Fiji GPU has proved to be great competition for Nvidia’s GTX 980 and even knocks on the door of the more expensive GTX 980 Ti in some tests. Even with fewer texture units and shader cores the Radeon R9 Fury performs very close to as good as the full blown Fury X does.
– As reviewed by TomsHardware on Jul 2015
GCN 3 (Fiji)
Architecture
High-end
Product Tier
3584
Shader Cores
64
ROPs
224
TMUs
No RT
Ray Tracing
4 GB
Memory
HBM
Memory Type
512 GB/s
Bandwidth
275 W
TDP
GPU Snapshot
Release date:Jul 10, 2015Price at Launch:$549
Type:DesktopArchitecture:GCN 3 (Fiji)
Generation:Radeon R9 300 seriesProduct Tier:High-end
VRAM Capacity:4 GBTotal Board Power:275 W
Core Configuration
Shader Cores:3584TMUs:224
ROPs:64L2 Cache:2 MB
Memory
VRAM Capacity:4 GBMemory Type:HBM
Memory Speed:1 GbpsMemory Bus:4096-bit
Bandwidth:512 GB/s
Graphics Processing
Base Clock:1 GHzFP32 Throughput:7.17 TFLOPs
Ray Tracing:NoProcess Size:28nm
Process Name:TSMC 28nmDie Size:596 mm²
Power & Connectivity
Total Board Power:275 WPower Connectors:2x 8-pin
Bus Interface:PCIe 3.0 x16HDMI Support:HDMI 1.4a
DisplayPort Support:DP 1.2aDSC:No
Max Displays:4
Media & Software Support
DirectX Support:12Shader Model:6.5
Vulkan Version:1.2OpenGL Version:4.6

Reviews and Ratings

86

Average Score

Based on 13 reviews

7.2

User Score

Based on 37 reviews

Reviewers Liked

  • Great performance
  • Faster than the GTX 980
  • Quieter than the liquid cooled Fury X
  • Competitive pricing
  • Fans turn off at low load
  • Excellent option for QHD gaming
  • Back plate
  • When overclocked to 1,100mhz it isn't too far behind reference clocked Fury X

Reviewers Didn't Like

  • Only 2 board partner releases
  • Not overclocked out of the box
  • No OC possible on memory
  • No HDMI 2.0 support
  • Very large card

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
80

If AMD and Nvidia’s flagship cards are too expensive then the AMD Radeon R9 Fury is a good option for high-end gameplay. Be warned, though – its power consumption is high.

By TrustedReviews on
85

Due to an unusually short review lead time, we weren't able to dive into each aspect of the Fury as extensively as usual, but it left a very good first impression and we're looking forward to additional testing in the near future.

By HotHardware on
80

And if you're looking for the lowest-cost way to start legitimate 4K gaming today, the Radeon Fury delivers—as long as you keep our caveats about future-proofing in mind. And you buy a FreeSync monitor.

By PCWorld on
87

The R9 Fury would benefit from an MSRP of $499, as opposed to $549, to ensure there is a price-to-performance win for AMD against the GTX 980. That said, the R9 Fury is still a good buy at its current price point, particularly Sapphire's Tri-X OC variant which delivers a cool-and-quiet experience thanks to some design innovations in the cooling arena.

By Bit-Tech on
90

We come away from this editorial with the feeling that R9 Fury is a better bet than the Fury X - a card that is blighted by the impressive performance of the GTX 980 Ti. R9 Fury occupies that barren price/performance space between Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 and GTX 980 Ti.

By Hexus on
85

The Sapphire Tri-X Radeon R9 Fury is a fantastic graphics card. It is powerful enough to outperform the GTX980 and the high bandwidth architecture delivers a wonderful gaming experience at Ultra HD 4k. The latest iteration of the Tri-X cooler sets a new standard for AMD cooling solutions – it is silent when idle and very quiet under extended heavy load.

By KitGuru on
85

AMD’s cut down Fiji GPU has proved to be great competition for Nvidia’s GTX 980 and even knocks on the door of the more expensive GTX 980 Ti in some tests. Even with fewer texture units and shader cores the Radeon R9 Fury performs very close to as good as the full blown Fury X does.

By TomsHardware on
85

ASUS has jam packed this video card full of high-end high-quality hardware components. It has even brought back the DVI port for the Fury series. If anything is built with overclocking potential, it is this video card, and we cannot wait to tear into overclocking. We think the potential is there to overtake Fury X if it can overclock well.

By HardOCP on
80

So the R9 Fury has its virtues. The difficult reality at present, though, is that this card is based on a bigger GPU with a larger appetite for power than the competing GeForce GTX 980. The Fury has more than double the memory bandwidth via HBM. It costs about 50 bucks more than the 980.

By The Tech Report on
90

Sapphire's implementation in the form of the Tri-X is solid as well. Even though the company went with the shorter reference-style PCB design of the Fury X card, using a full-length cooler means that the card performs perfectly with temperatures hovering in the mid-70C range.

By PCPer on
95

SAPPHIRE kills it for Team Red with the Tri-X R9 Fury. It doesn't trail far behind the Fury X, but thanks to its air cooler, the video card is a quiet, but powerful package that provides great performance.

By TweakTown on

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