AMD Radeon R9 380X

Although the Radeon R9 380X is based on the latest Graphics Core Next architecture, at its roots you will find a graphics card that is almost four years old now, the venerable Radeon HD 7970. Performance-wise the R9 380X makes for the perfect 1080p solution, though it is much closer to the more affordable R9 380 than it is the far more desirable R9 390
– As reviewed by TechSpot on Nov 2015
GCN 3 (Tonga)
Architecture
Midrange
Product Tier
2048
Shader Cores
32
ROPs
128
TMUs
No RT
Ray Tracing
4 GB
Memory
GDDR5
Memory Type
182 GB/s
Bandwidth
190 W
TDP
GPU Snapshot
Release date:Nov 19, 2015Price at Launch:$229
Type:DesktopArchitecture:GCN 3 (Tonga)
Generation:Radeon R9 300 seriesProduct Tier:Midrange
VRAM Capacity:4 GBTotal Board Power:190 W
Core Configuration
Shader Cores:2048TMUs:128
ROPs:32L2 Cache:512 KB
Memory
VRAM Capacity:4 GBMemory Type:GDDR5
Memory Speed:5.7 GbpsMemory Bus:256-bit
Bandwidth:182 GB/s
Graphics Processing
Base Clock:0.97 GHzFP32 Throughput:3.97 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 18 reviews

8.0

User Score

Based on 57 reviews

Reviewers Liked

  • Excellent 1080p performance
  • 4GB Of Memory
  • Fans turn off in idle and light gaming-no noise!
  • Backplate included
  • Exploits gap between rival cards

Reviewers Didn't Like

  • 1440p gameplay isn't always smooth
  • Last Year's GPU Tech
  • Lack of HDMI 2.0
  • Less frugal than competition
75

Although the Radeon R9 380X is based on the latest Graphics Core Next architecture, at its roots you will find a graphics card that is almost four years old now, the venerable Radeon HD 7970. Performance-wise the R9 380X makes for the perfect 1080p solution, though it is much closer to the more affordable R9 380 than it is the far more desirable R9 390

By TechSpot on
75

Just last month we put together our annual guide to the best graphics cards on offer at every price point. The key battles took place at $100, $150, $200 and $300, with top graphics cards such as the Radeon R9 390X and GeForce GTX 980 Ti taking us to...

By TechSpot on
85

The fastest graphics card you can find for under $250, but not substantially different from other...

By PC Gamer on
86

The Radeon R9 380X is a solid mid-range GPU, and offers some significant benefits over the previous 380X, and hold up well against other mid-range GPU's from the liked of NVidia. For the amount you pay for the 380X, you'll be hard pressed to find a...

By 4k.com on
80

The biggest problem for the R9 380X might be those two dots in the upper-right corner of our scatter plot. Some variants of the GeForce GTX 970 can be had for under $300 right now, and the R9 390 is right there with it. If you've been paying attention to our test results, you know that the extra cash or so buys you a lot more graphics card.

By The Tech Report on
91

The extra $10 that ASUS is asking for their STRIX OC are well invested, the highlight here is definitely the excellent cooler with the good fan settings, but the overclock out of the box, helps, too. Overall the R9 380X is a good measure at the price point it is at, but I would have wished for more competitive pricing, so that it can really capture this price-bracket, and not just cannibalize NVIDIA sales until they launch a GTX 960 Ti or drop GTX 970 pricing even further.

By TechPowerUp on
85

If you are looking to choose between the 960 and 380X for 2560×1440 gaming then it’s a pretty easy decision. AMD gives the best framerates, for 1080p gaming the two cards offer playable results so price may come into it a little more. Looking up the stack, the GTX 970 is £249 currently, so a good deal on that could make life a little tough for the more expensive versions of the 380X but, for now, assuming retailers/manufacturers hit the £180-ish price point which AMD were quoting in the run up to launch, the 380X is an ideal choice for gaming up to 2560×1440 resolution.

By HardwareHeaven on
90

The AMD R9 380X GPU carves out a currently untouched pricing segment between the GTX 960 and the GTX 970/R9 390 cards, but that pricing window is very narrow. Once you get out of that pricing segment or to the edge of it however, its weaknesses quickly come to the surface. Why AMD sent us a $260 R9 380X to evaluate is a bit confusing to us. We would have much rather of reviewed a "reference" card at MSRP pricing today.

By HardOCP on
80

En general creo que es un buen chip, compite bien con la Nvidia Geforce GTX 960, pero la versión de este chip de Nvidia con 4GB de VRAM es más barata que la Radeon R9 380X. No sé si la diferencia de rendimiento compensará la inversión, un 10% superior, pero estoy seguro que los precios de este modelo se normalizarán en pocas semanas hacia una posición más competitiva.

By HispaZone on
84

The R9 380X is a solid performer when it comes to 1080p, but for an extra $50, grabbing a R9 390 instead is just too tempting.

By PCGamer on
70

The R9 380X is a great little 1080p card, but often struggles running at the 1440p level AMD is aiming it at. Asus has undoubtedly made a great version of the card though, with quality cooling and almost silent operation.

By TechRadar on
70

The AMD Radeon R9 380X delivers solid performance, but there are cheaper alternatives out...

By Trusted Reviews on

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