Everything you need to know about ATI's brand new dual-GPU graphics card
The wait for a Radeon that owns the title 'fastest graphics card in the world' is over - with its
This article is intended to be a one-stop piece rounding up all the coverage you need.
* Here's our review of the Radeon HD 4870 X2.
* If you just want the numbers, go straight to our performance benchmarks (opens in a new window).
* If you want to buy one of these new cards, we've listed a selection of the best prices available on the web.
We've also rounded up the best of the reviews from the rest of the web - and we'll add to these as more reviews go up:
* Tech Report: 'You know all of the
caveats that go along with a multi-GPU graphics card like the Radeon HD
4870 X2. Without proper support in the game or a profile in the video
driver, you may only see about half of the performance potential of
your video card. There's no getting around that. But in the case of
this particular card, even if the worst happens, you're falling back on
the performance of one of the fastest GPUs around in the Radeon HD
4870... It's
easily the quickest "single" video card you can buy, and it almost
feels like a good deal at $549.' (No score given)
* PC Perspective: 'Just like we concluded in our preview last month, the AMD Radeon HD
4870 X2 2GB graphics card is incredibly impressive and easily takes the
performance lead for a single graphics away from NVIDIA GeForce GTX
280. The power consumption is pretty high, on par with a pair of GTX
260s and we were let down by the performance of CrossFireX but neither
of these factors over-shadow the power the card provided for
high-resolution and high quality
gaming. If you need an enthusiast-class graphics card for your next
gaming system then AMD Radeon HD 4870 X2 2GB is your ticket to gaming
nirvana.' (Gold award)
* Anandtech: 'I keep getting the
impression that multi-GPU is great for marketing but not particularly
important when it comes to actually investing R&D dollars into
design. With every generation, especially from AMD, I expect to see a
much more seamless use of multiple GPUs, but instead we're given the
same old solution - we rely on software profiles to ensure that
multiple GPUs work well in a system rather than having a hardware
solution where two GPUs truly appear, behave and act as one to the
software. Maybe it's not in the consumer's best interest for the
people making the GPUs to be the same people making the chipsets, it's
too easy to try and use multi-GPU setups to sell more chipsets when the
focus should really be on making multiple GPUs more attractive across
the board, and just...work. But I digress. The Radeon HD 4870 X2 is good, it continues to be the world's fastest
single card solution, provided that you're running a game with
CrossFire support.' (No score given)