There’s been a lot of speculation about the potential release date for AMD’s upcoming RDNA 4 graphics cards. Lisa Su, the CEO of AMD, has just put an end to most of these claims. While initial predictions pinned AMD’s future best graphics cards at the end of 2024, AMD now confirms that RDNA 4 is on track to launch in early 2025. This announcement arrives alongside a steep decrease in AMD’s gaming revenue. AMD has been quiet about RDNA 4 (or RX 8000 series) for months, but we’ve seen many reports from various leakers who had something to say about the potential release date for these next-gen GPUs. At the beginning of 2024, these claims were fairly optimistic, with some leakers claiming that the AMD Radeon RX 8000 series might launch as early as this summer. That did not happen, and as the months went by, many of them adopted a more conservative release window sometime in 2025. Now, thanks to AMD’s third-quarter earnings call, we know that those later claims were correct. Su spoke about AMD’s decline in gaming graphics revenue as she revealed that RDNA 4 GPUs are set to be released in early 2025. “In gaming graphics, revenue declined year-over-year as we prepare for a transition to our next-gen Radeon GPUs based on our RDNA 4 architecture,” Su said, as quoted by VideoCardz. “In addition to a strong increase in gaming performance, RDNA 4 delivers significantly higher ray tracing performance and adds new AI capabilities.” The comment about a performance increase makes me curious. AMD itself admitted that it’s targeting the mainstream market with its next-gen GPUs in a recent conversation with Tom’s Hardware. Leakers predict that its new flagship may not beat the RX 7900 XTX in performance, so an increase is hard to picture right now — but AMD is planning to improve the performance-per-dollar aspect of its GPUs, so that’s where it might excel. In its previous earnings call, AMD revealed that its gaming revenue was down by a staggering 48% year-over-year. The company didn’t expect things to get better, and it appears that they have not improved whatsoever. The report reveals that AMD’s gaming segment revenue in the third quarter was down 69% year-over-year, and the company cites “a decrease in semi-custom revenue” as the main culprit here. With Nvidia’s RTX 50-series also rumored to launch in early 2025, and both companies expected to make announcements at CES 2025, we’re about to see the GPU market start heating up. Oh, alright then. Back on the AMD hype train I go. If you’ve had any interest in some of the best graphics cards in recent years, you probably know that the disturbing lack of video memory (VRAM) has been debated over and over. Games get more complex by the day, but not all GPUs are ready to face them for the years to come. As the consumer market grows more and more critical of low VRAM on GPUs, it seems that AMD might be listening. A new leak shows upcoming RDNA 5 GPUs equipped with more VRAM than ever, and more juice to help them battle Nvidia. AMD’s FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 (FSR 4) upscaling is no longer limited to a short list of supported game titles. Thanks to a recent update to OptiScaler, Radeon RX 9000 series GPU users can now enable FSR 4 in virtually any game that uses DirectX 11 or 12. OptiScaler is an open-source utility that allows you to swap a game’s existing upscaler with a more advanced version. For instance, if a game supports an older upscaling method like FSR 2, OptiScaler can intercept that and substitute it with FSR 4 instead. This gives players access to the latest upscaling technology, even in games that haven’t officially been updated to support it. It’s clear that AMD hit the jackpot with its recent RX 9070 XT and non-XT GPUs. The pair quickly climbed up every list of the best graphics cards, and perhaps more importantly, received a warm welcome from the GPU market at large (and thus sold out immediately). A new leak tells us that AMD is shipping lots of GPUs to try to keep up with the demand — and yet they’re still not in stock. The information comes from Moore’s Law Is Dead on YouTube, who claims to have spoken to a major online retailer about RDNA 4 stock levels. Both Nvidia and AMD have been in a pretty dire place since the release of their latest graphics cards, with many people referring to the RTX 50-series as a “paper launch.” The cards just sell out too quickly and too many people are left trying to find one.


