Skip to main content

AMD reveals Radeon RX 6800, 6800 XT, 6900 XT starting at $580

After trailing rival Nvidia in the high-end GPU space, AMD finally has a high-end graphics card — complete with real-time ray tracing capabilities — in the form of the new Radeon RX 6000 family.

AMD is formally taking the wraps off its Radeon GPU. This new graphics card allows AMD to go head-to-head with the competing Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 GPU. AMD teased the design and specifications of its Radeon card prior to launch, with executives poking fun at Nvidia by stating that the AMD GPUs won’t suffer the same shortage issues as the flagship GeForce card.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Unlike Nvidia’s PC-centric GPUs, the RDNA 2 architecture — also referred to as Navi 2x and nicknamed “Big Navi” by devoted gamers — that’s powering AMD’s GPU will not only be headed to gaming PCs and workstations, but will also be found in next-generation consoles, like Microsoft’s Xbox Series X and Sony’s PlayStation 5, this holiday season.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Radeon RX 6800 XT

Image used with permission by copyright holder

One of the first PC graphics cards to utilize AMD’s RDNA 2 architecture is the new Radeon RX 6800 XT, which is designed for 4K gaming.

“The 6800 XT is purposefully designed to play all of your favorite AAA games at 4K and below resolutions, and at the highest-quality settings available,” AMD’s team stated.

The $650 graphics card is equipped with 72 compute units and a game clock speed of over 2 gigahertz. It features a 2.25 GHz boost speed, 128 MB of Infinity Cache, and 16GB of GDDR6 memory. The card is rated at 300 watts of TDP. It will arrive November 18.

During AMD’s presentation, the company positioned the RX 6800 XT against Nvidia’s flagship RTX 3080 GPU, showing that its card can also perform in 4K at 60 frames per second (fps).

“As you can see, the 6800 XT not only delivers on 4K 60 frames per second, but in most cases, it overperforms,” AMD said in its comparison. “And as you can see, the 6800 XT trades blows and has some significant wins across a variety of titles.” Those include Borderlands 3Battlefield 5, and Call of Duty Modern Warfare.

Radeon RX 6800

RX 6800 comparison
Image used with permission by copyright holder

AMD next announced its most affordable new card, the Radeon RX 6800. Priced at $580 and coming November 18, the card was pitted against the RTX 2080 Ti in AMD’s benchmarks.

Based on pricing, AMD clearly intends this card to be a competitor to the Nvidia RTX 3070, though the Radeon RX 6800 is a bit more expensive.

One key difference highlighted by AMD is the RX 6800’s memory. It will have 16GB of GDDR6 memory, which is a lot for a $580 graphics card. AMD is pitching this as a better solution for 1440p and 4K gaming.

Radeon RX 6900 XT

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Finally, AMD announced the RX 6900 XT as “one more GPU” to close the show.

“We knew that the RDNA 2 architecture could give gamers even more,” AMD CEO Lisa Su stated while unveiling the Radeon RX 6900 XT. This is AMD’s most powerful GPU that launched today and is built for “the ultimate in 4K gaming performance.”

The GPU ships with 80 compute units with a 2.25GHz boost clock and 16GB of GDDR6 memory. The 6900 XT has a 300-watt TDP, hitting 65% more performance per watt than the prior RDNA architecture.

With 4K at the highest settings, the 6900 XT was shown to be competitive with the RTX 3090 from Nvidia.

This GPU will be available on December 8 starting at $999.

Here’s a summary of each card.

  • Radeon RX 6800 – 60 CUs, 16GB GDDR6, $580, November 18
  • Radeon RX 6800 XT – 72 CUs, 16GB GDDR6, $650, November 18
  • Radeon RX 6900 XT – 80 CUs, 16GB GDDR6, $999, December 8

Big Navi’s architecture goes to infinity

“2020 is the year of the gamer,” Su proclaimed during the Radeon keynote presentation. AMD called it the most powerful GPU ever built, offering 50% better performance than last year’s RDNA architecture that it replaces, which already offers a 50% performance-per-watt over the old GCN architecture.

Though AMD is using the same 7nm process node as the prior RDNA platform, Su and her team say the company made significant process and architectural improvements to push for better performance-per-watt.

“We advanced all aspects of the compute unit design, leveraging techniques first developed for the CPUs,” said Laura Smith, graphics chief engineer. “We deployed pervasive fine-grained clock gating, [and] reimagined the pipeline to aggressively maximize performance while minimizing data movement. In combination, these elements make the compute units 30% more energy efficient, allowing them to be pushed faster.”

AMD solved the efficiency challenge by using a high-density, high-speed cache, and the company called this the Infinity Cache. The system helps minimize bottlenecks, latencies, and reduces power consumption. AMD claimed that its new custom libraries and high-speed design flows allow the new RDNA 2 to gain 30% faster frequencies using the same 7nm process node.

The company worked with Microsoft to bring DirectX 12 Ultimate features, such as DirectX ray tracing, variable rate shading, mesh shaders, and more into the architecture of RDNA 2. The platform will also support Microsoft’s Direct Storage API, which should help games load much faster with minimal lag.

More power through overclocking

Sony / Santa Monica Studio

Gamers can get a further boost with a one-click Rage Mode, an overclocking feature built into the Radeon software package. This takes advantage of the overclocking built into the GPU, AMD said.

Another key feature is AMD Smart Access Memory, which can unlock more high-speed memory for gamers using a Ryzen processor.

“AMD Smart Access Memory unlocks the greater amount of high-speed memory from the AMD Radeon RX 6000 series graphics cards to the AMD Ryzen 5000 series processors, and it delivers additional levels of performance in games,” the company said of the feature.

When Rage Mode is combined with Smart Access Memory, gamers can see up to a 13% uplift in performance.

Radeon Anti-Lag and Radeon Boost help to reduce latency that works with monitors supporting AMD’s FreeSync technology. This helps reduce latency by as much as 37%, AMD said, in games like Fortnite.

“For select games, Radeon Boost offers dynamic resolution in response to your mouse or controller inputs, leading to higher frame rates, and as a result, quicker responses to your input,” AMD said.

Ray tracing will be supported on these GPUs, and DirectX 12 Ultimate will also be supported. There are more than 35 titles with announced support including Godfall, FarCry 6Dirt 5, World of Warcraft, and  The Rift Breaker.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
You shouldn’t buy these Nvidia GPUs right now
RTX 4060 Ti sitting on a pink background.

Buying a new GPU in this generation is a bit of a tricky minefield of graphics cards to steer clear of. Sometimes, the performance is there, but the value is not; other times, you could get something much more capable for the same amount of money.

While Nvidia makes some of the best GPUs, it's certainly no stranger to that performance vs. value dilemma. Below, I'll show you three Nvidia graphics cards you're better off avoiding right now and tell you their much better alternatives.
RTX 4060 Ti

Read more
AMD needs to fix this one problem with its next-gen GPUs
The RX 7800 XT graphics card with the ReSpec logo.

AMD's current-gen graphics cards have been a revelation. Last generation, AMD was able to hit performance parity with Nvidia while sacrificing ray tracing performance. This generation, AMD is maintaining parity while getting closer in ray tracing, as showcased by GPUs like the RX 7900 GRE. But the next frontier of gaming is rapidly approaching, and AMD's current options aren't up to the task right now.

I'm talking about path tracing. Nvidia calls it "full ray tracing," and it's a lighting technique that can take gaming visuals to the next level. Path tracing is only available in a small list of titles right now, but with frame generation and upscaling tools better than they've ever been, it won't be long before we see these destination gaming experiences everywhere.
Player two in path tracing

Read more
AMD’s GPUs had a bigger year in 2023 than you might realize
AMD's RX 7700 XT in a test bench.

It's safe to say that 2023 turned out to be a good year for the discrete graphics cards market. According to the latest data, both AMD and Nvidia saw an increase in add-in board (AIB) GPU shipments in the final quarter of 2023, and the year-to-year gains are also massive. While Nvidia still dominates the market, AMD's share is climbing steadily, and Intel remains in the shadows.

Today's round of market insights comes from Jon Peddie Research (JPR), and it's all about discrete GPUs. According to the analyst firm, discrete GPU shipments increased by 6.8% over the fourth quarter of 2023 compared to the previous quarter. This is above the less-than-impressive 10-year average of -0.6%. The year-to-year gains are even more impressive, though, as JPR notes a 32% increase compared to the final quarter of 2022, with a total of 9.5 million GPUs shipped (as opposed to 8.9 million units at the end of 2022).

Read more