News

AMD launches without announcing a Radeon RX 6300 for the entry range

Normally, the launch of a new graphics card from one of the major manufacturers is preceded by a promotional campaign in which its features and quality are discussed. But the recent release of a 6300G VRAM AMD Radeon RX 2 has gone unnoticed until it has hit the Chinese market.

Last year, it was reported that AMD was preparing a new entry-level graphics card known as the Radeon RX 6400. The graphics card would feature the Navi 24 “Beige Goby” GPU and have 2GB of GDDR6 memory. All indications are that the graphics card has recently been launched in the OEM GPU segment and under a different name.

AMD brings RDNA 2 to the entry-level segment

As for the specifications, although its exact number of cores has not been confirmed, it seems very likely that the AMD Radeon RX 6300 will have 640 or 512 stream processors inside 10 or 8 Compute Units. This figure would make it less than the Phoenix RDNA 3 iGPUs, which offer 12 CUs and up to 768 cores. Other specifications, discovered by user Komachi_Ensaka, reveal that the GPU runs at 1512 MHz, the memory at 2000 MHz and the card has 2 GB of memory in a 32-bit bus configuration. With this you have up to 64 GB/s of bandwidth. The card should also have 16MB of Infinity Cache.

As for the design of the AMD Radeon RX 6300 graphics card, it's listed on Goofish as coming in an HFHL form factor with just two display outputs, an HDMI port, and a DisplayPort port. They support a resolution of up to 8K at 60Hz. It is cooled by a single active fan with dynamic speed technology, and consumes 32W TDP delivered through the PCIe connector. Its interface is PCIe 4.0 x4.

It has been seen in China for a price that would be equivalent to about 60 US dollars. As it happens with this type of low-category graphics, they are more designed to have additional HDMI and Display Port outputs on the same PC and thus have more screens, and to be able to assemble very low-budget PCs for public, educational, and rather than simply needing a functional set of PCs at the cheapest possible price. that is why it has been seen first in OEM manufacturers; and it would not be surprising that the RX 6300 does not arrive or that it takes several months to reach the DIY market.

Source: Wccftech

Show more

Related publications

Leave your comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *

Button back to top
CLOSE

Ad blocker detected

This site is funded through the use of advertising. We always make sure that the advertising is not too intrusive for the reader and we prioritize the reader's experience on the website. However, if you block the ads, part of our funding will be reduced.