Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

AMD will launch anniversary edition Radeon VII and 2700X to celebrate 50th year

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Ahead of the launch of AMD’s upcoming Ryzen 3000 CPUs and Navi graphics cards, the company has another momentous event to celebrate: its 50th birthday. Like Intel in 2018 with its 40th, AMD isn’t letting this anniversary pass without some special edition hardware. Its flagship graphics card and gamer CPU, the Radeon VII and Ryzen 2700X respectively, will be sold as anniversary editions with some physical changes, and potentially performance enhancements.

In 2018 Intel celebrated its 40th anniversary with a special CPU named after its very first, the Intel Core i7-8086K. It was in reality a specially binned 8700K that could boost to 5GHz, making it more of a collector’s item than a truly new and enhanced component. Especially with the ninth-generation 9700K and 9900K just around the corner. AMD isn’t offering hardware with nostalgic names, so it’s more obvious what you’re getting for your money — or at least it should be when we learn more about them.

Recommended Videos

At this stage we have a picture, a launch date, and some speculative pricing. The image turfed up by VideoCardz shows the gold-tinted packaging of both the Radeon VII and Ryzen 2700X anniversary edition components. The Radeon VII appears to have been given a new red shroud for its cooler. It’s not clear if any physical changes have been made to the 2700X, but it’s possible that its bundled cooler will feature similar red tinting.

The big date in the image is April 29, which is a couple of days before AMD’s official 50th anniversary on May 1. That would suggest the two products will hit online retailers then, likely in limited numbers.

The big question for prospective buyers will be what kind of performance difference can be expected. These will likely be especially binned (selected) to allow greater clock speed headroom leading to increased stock boost clocks. We might see the 2700X go from its standard 4.3GHz to 4.5GHz, for example. Since these aren’t drastically different products, though, we wouldn’t expect giant leaps in performance.

Pricing will be a major point of contention, too. As special editions of existing hardware we would expect prices to be higher than usual. Both Buy at Amazon in the past week though, so it may be that they aren’t much more expensive than their stock counterparts were just recently.

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
Microsoft Copilot can now handle more of your finance work in Excel with reusable skills and data connectors
Live financial data now flows straight into your spreadsheet.
copilot-for-excel-finance

Microsoft just gave Copilot in Excel a serious upgrade for anyone who spends their day buried in spreadsheets. The update centers on three things finance teams actually care about: reusable workflows, live data straight from trusted sources, and a clear record of exactly what Copilot edited in your sheet.

https://twitter.com/satyanadella/status/2070180313654063255?s=46

Read more
Apple could skip Pro and Max trims for M6 silicon, eyes M7 for beefy upgrades
A new Mac Studio with an M5 Ultra chip might also be on the way.
Macbook Pro

It looks like Apple's silicon strategy is primed for yet another big overhaul. According to a fresh report by Bloomberg, the upcoming M6 processor will only get a baseline version, and there won't be any Pro or Max variants offered for it. Instead, Apple is reserving those powerful upgrades for the M7 series of silicon, including an Ultra version planned for it. 

“The company is taking this unusual step in order to fast-track technologies that it originally planned to release later. The change should help meet growing demand for on-device AI capabilities and more graphics-intensive software,” says the report. 

Read more
Apple just raised the price of its products by hundreds of dollars
Apple shielded customers from memory costs longer than anyone. But the inevitable has happened.
iPadOS 27 on iPad

For months, the memory crisis was everyone else’s problem, but it didn't affect Apple. While smartphone and laptop makers quickly gave in, raising prices across their entry-level and flagship products, Apple stood strong, absorbing costs through long-term supplier deals that gave it leverage most brands simply didn’t have.

The situation, I fear, has gotten worse. Earlier today, the Cupertino giant revised the prices for multiple products, including the MacBooks, iPads, and Mac Studio. 

Read more