Radeon Vega logo, graphics card design revealed at AMD's Ryzen event

Radeon Vega logo, graphics card design revealed at AMD's Ryzen event
radeon vega logoImage: Gordon Mah Ung

AMD held a tech day for the press on Tuesday, and while the focus was squarely on the new AMD Ryzen pricing, release date info, and performance, some new tidbits about the hotly anticipated Vega graphics cards were quietly revealed, too.

First up: The Radeon Vega logo, which appeared in an overview slide shown to the press, as you can see in the image below. We’ve zoomed in on the logo for this article’s headline image for your viewing pleasure.

radeon vega Gordon Mah Ung

Cameras caught the Radeon Vega logo in a slide at AMD’s Tuesday presentation.

The company apparently didn’t want to reveal the Vega logo yet, as it’s been awkwardly removed in AMD’s video of the Ryzen presentation on YouTube. Cameras don’t lie, alas.

AMD also showed Radeon Vega graphics cards running in the open for the first time at the event. While Radeon Vega demos at CES revealed the GPU’s blistering Doom performance, the graphics card itself was tucked inside a closed case, and obscured with black tape when it was shown. The curtain was pulled back at Tuesday’s tech event, as you can see starting at roughly the 5:50 mark in the Paul’s Hardware video below. (Give Paul a follow while you’re at it—he does great work.)

Ignore the funky USB header and whatnot. As Paul says, it’s only there because this unit is an engineering sample. It’s clear the enthusiast-class Vega card carries on the sleek design cues that originated with the Fury lineup and continued in the RX 400 series. The only practical information gleaned from the reveal is that the card uses an 8-pin and a 6-pin power connector, proving that Vega is indeed more power-efficient than the Fury X, which relied on dual 8-pin connectors. No great surprise there.

Radeon Vega doesn’t have a firm release date, but AMD says the card will launch in the first half of 2017. Want to know more? AMD’s holding a “Capsaicin” livestream on February 28, where more Radeon Vega details will no doubt be teased. In the meantime, check out PCWorld’s coverage of the five things you need to know about Radeon Vega based on a technical preview and hands-on event, and tune in below as PCWorld’s Full Nerd crew discusses Vega vs. Nvidia’s incoming GeForce GTX 1080 Ti, Ryzen, and a whole lot more.

admin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *