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Review: Sapphire Radeon R9 380X Nitro

by Parm Mann on 19 November 2015, 14:00

Tags: AMD (NYSE:AMD), Sapphire

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qacwcl

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Conclusion

...realises the full potential of the Tonga core and delivers 1440p gaming credentials at a price point no rival GeForce can presently match.

AMD's Radeon R9 380X is a fine GPU. Introduced at $229 (£185), the mid-range addition to the R9 300-series line-up offers best-in-class performance coupled with genuine value-adds such as FreeSync compatibility and full DX12 support.

Filling the void between R9 380 and R9 390, the new addition belatedly realises the full potential of the Tonga core and delivers 1440p gaming credentials at a price point no rival GeForce can presently match.

There's nothing particularly ground breaking about the GPU's composition, but it's a clever case of maneuvering and AMD has ultimately hit a sweet spot with the right graphics card, at the right time, and at the right price.

Serving also as a sign of things to come, it could be debated that the days of huge performance innovations with each new GPU are coming to a close. Today's additions are all about delivering greater efficiency as well as a wider ecosystem of software enhancements and display technologies. FreeSync is a prime example, and AMD needs to maintain momentum with the upcoming Radeon Software refresh, codenamed Crimson.

So is this a GPU you should buy? The case for R9 380X will become murkier if retail pricing for partner cards is inflated much beyond the MSRP, but should it stick close to £185, Sapphire's R9 380X Nitro is well worth consideration.

The Good
 
The Bad
R9 380X the fastest sub-£200 GPU
Primed for high-quality 1440p gaming
Decent overclocking headroom
Ideal companion for a FreeSync display
Excellent build quality
 
Can't do 4K60 via HDMI
Not as efficient as GeForce alternatives



Sapphire Radeon R9 380X Nitro

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The Sapphire Radeon R9 380X Nitro graphics card is available to purchase from Scan Computers.

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At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



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HEXUS Forums :: 17 Comments

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Serving also as a sign of things to come, it could be debated that the days of huge performance innovations with each new GPU are coming to a close.
You may regret saying that next year…
If I knew this was landing I would have held off a few weeks to get it over the R9 380!!, don't get me wrong, what I now have is awesome and runs everything silky but this would have been a better investment
Ferral
If I knew this was landing I would have held off a few weeks to get it over the R9 380!!, don't get me wrong, what I now have is awesome and runs everything silky but this would have been a better investment

I think you've done OK. For all the full fat unlocking, it's not much of an increase in performance - if something wasn't playable on the 380 it's not likely to be on the 380X either.
Ferral
If I knew this was landing I would have held off a few weeks to get it over the R9 380!!, don't get me wrong, what I now have is awesome and runs everything silky but this would have been a better investment

Same boat as you, having mine for less than a month now. Hopefully they'll be able to be unlocked to 380x with a bios flash. Still very happy with mine though.
Not bad for a midrange card, but I would much rather save another £50 and go with a 390