Gaming RX Vega Ccards To Come With Additional "Goodies" Versus The Frontier Edition Raja's comments around the challenges associated with the HBM2 ramp add credence to our thesis that the 9 month long HBM 2 delay pushed AMD's Vega launch much further back than the company had hoped for or intended. The good news is that unlike HBM1, HBM2 is offered from multiple memory vendors – including Samsung and Hynix – and production is ramping to meet the level of demand that we believe Radeon Vega products will see in the market. And that’s not easy! It’s not like you can run down to the corner store to get HBM2. We want to bring all of that goodness to you. Right now only insanely priced graphics cards from our competitors that aren’t within reach of any gamer or consumer make use of it. On HBM2, we’re effectively putting a technology that’s been limited to super expensive, out-of-reach GPUs into a consumer product. We’re working as hard as we can to bring you Radeon RX Vega. We believe those experiences are worth waiting for and shouldn’t be rushed out the door. It takes time for developers to adapt and adopt new techniques that make your gaming experience better than ever. These aren’t things that can be mastered overnight. And some of Vega’s features, like our High Bandwidth Cache Controller, HBM2, Rapid-Packed Math, or the new geometry pipeline, have the potential to really break new ground and fundamentally improve game development. Developing products with billions of transistors and forward-thinking architecture is extremely difficult - but extremely rewarding - work. We know how eager you are to get your hands on Radeon RX Vega, and we’re working extremely hard to bring you a graphics card that you’ll be incredibly proud to own. We’ll be showing Radeon RX Vega off at Computex, but it won't be on store shelves that week. Raja Koduri - Chief Architect Radeon Technologies Group
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