•
Graphics Core Next 3 (Volcanic Islands) is found on the R9 285 (Tonga Pro) branded products. • Graphics Core Next 2 (Sea Islands) is found on R7 260 (Bonaire), R7 260X (Bonaire XTX), R9 290 (Hawaii Pro), R9 290X (Hawaii XT), and R9 295X2 (Vesuvius) branded products. • Graphics Core Next 1 (Southern Islands) is found on R9 270, 270X, 280, 280X, R7 240, 250, 250X, 265, and R5 240 branded products. •
TeraScale 2 (VLIW5) (Northern Islands or Evergreen) is found on R5 235X and below branded products. • OpenGL 4.x compliance requires supporting FP64 shaders. These are implemented by emulation on some
TeraScale (microarchitecture) GPUs. • Vulkan 1.0 requires GCN-Architecture. Vulkan 1.1 requires GCN 2 or higher.
Multi-monitor support The
AMD Eyefinity-branded on-
die display controllers were introduced in September 2009 in the
Radeon HD 5000 series and have been present in all products since.
AMD TrueAudio AMD TrueAudio was introduced with the AMD Radeon RX 200 series, but can only be found on the
dies of GCN 2/3 products.
Video acceleration AMD's
SIP core for video acceleration,
Unified Video Decoder and
Video Coding Engine, are found on all GPUs and supported by
AMD Catalyst and by the
free and open-source graphics device driver.
Use in cryptocurrency mining During 2014 the Radeon R9 200 series GPUs offered a very competitive price for usage in
cryptocurrency mining. This led to limited supply and huge price increases of up to 164% over the MSRP in Q4 of 2013 and Q1 of 2014. Since Q2 of 2018 availability of AMD GPUs as well as pricing has, in most cases, normalized.
CrossFire Compatibility Because many of the products in the range are rebadged versions of Radeon HD products, they remain compatible with the original versions when used in CrossFire mode. For example, the Radeon HD 7770 and Radeon R7 250X both use the 'Cape Verde XT' chip so have identical specifications and will work in CrossFire mode. This provides a useful upgrade option for anyone who owns an existing Radeon HD card and has a CrossFire compatible motherboard.
Virtual super resolution support Starting with the driver release candidate version v14.501-141112a-177751E, officially named as
Catalyst Omega, AMD's driver release introduced VSR on the R9 285 and R9 290 series graphics cards. This feature allows users to run games with higher image quality by rendering frames at above native resolution. Each frame is then
downsampled to native resolution. This process is an alternative to
supersampling which is not supported by all games. Virtual superb resolution is similar to
Dynamic Super Resolution, a feature available on competing
nVidia graphics cards, but trades flexibility for increased performance. VSR can run at a resolution upwards of 2048 x 1536 at a 120 Hz refresh rate or 3840 x 2400 at 60 Hz.
OpenCL (API) OpenCL accelerates many scientific Software Packages against CPU up to factor 10 or 100 and more. Open CL 1.0 to 1.2 are supported for all Chips with Terascale and GCN Architecture. OpenCL 2.0 is supported with GCN 2nd Gen. (or 1.2) and higher. For OpenCL 2.1 and 2.2 only Driver Updates are necessary with OpenCL 2.0 conformant Cards.
Vulkan (API) API Vulkan 1.0 is supported for all GCN architecture cards. Vulkan 1.2 requires GCN 2nd gen or higher with the Adrenalin 20.1 and Linux Mesa 20.0 drivers and up. ==Desktop models==