We’ve known about the RX 480’s younger siblings, the RX 470 and 460, for quite some time. Details on the card’s performance, feature set, and price point – pretty much everything about the cards – were lacking. Today, the RX 470 launches in earnest, and the shroud is lifted on one of the new budget-friendly cards.
The beating heart of the RX 470 is 2,048 Stream Processors with a 926MHz base clock, and a 1,206MHz boost clock in the reference version. AMD has chosen a full four gigabytes of GDDR5 for the mid-range offering, clocked at up to 1,750MHz. AIB partners are also available in the typical selection of overclocked flavors.
This is, of course, a GPU based on the 14nm FinFET die size, in what AMD refers to as the Polaris architecture. That means a rich feature set, including DirectX 12 optimization, FreeSync, Eyefinity, and support for the new Vulkan graphics API.
Most of the offerings are full-length, double-wide cards. Our review unit happens to be a Sapphire OC with a reference-style cooler, and it’s 9.5 inches long, the same length as the RX 480, with the same short PCB and extended cooler. The 120W TDP means the card needs some help from a six-pin PCIe power connection. Like most cards, ours is equipped with an HDMI 2.0b port, and a trio of DisplayPort 1.4 outputs.
We have a full review coming early next week, but to tide you over until then, we do have a little taste to share from our ongoing performance testing. Installed in our X99 test system, the RX 470 scored 9,215 in 3DMark’s Fire Strike benchmark, about 14 percent behind the RX 480.
For the real-world gaming tests and comparative performance results, you’ll have to wait until next week. The card is available now for a suggested $179 retail price, just $20 short of the vanilla RX 480 – if you can find it. At publish, all five RX 470 models on Newegg, which cost between $179 and $240, are sold out.
Buy on Newegg
Related Posts
New study shows AI isn’t ready for office work
A reality check for the "replacement" theory
Google Research suggests AI models like DeepSeek exhibit collective intelligence patterns
The paper, published on arXiv with the evocative title Reasoning Models Generate Societies of Thought, posits that these models don't merely compute; they implicitly simulate a "multi-agent" interaction. Imagine a boardroom full of experts tossing ideas around, challenging each other's assumptions, and looking at a problem from different angles before finally agreeing on the best answer. That is essentially what is happening inside the code. The researchers found that these models exhibit "perspective diversity," meaning they generate conflicting viewpoints and work to resolve them internally, much like a team of colleagues debating a strategy to find the best path forward.
Microsoft tells you to uninstall the latest Windows 11 update
https://twitter.com/hapico0109/status/2013480169840001437?s=20