Home / Tech News / Featured Tech News / AMD’s RX Vega said to be ‘insanely good’ for mining but retailers hope to avoid stock droughts

AMD’s RX Vega said to be ‘insanely good’ for mining but retailers hope to avoid stock droughts

Earlier this week, we heard that AMD intentionally pushed the release of the RX Vega back a bit to ensure that there were enough graphics cards to go around at launch. A big reason for this strategy was potential demand from miners. Now it seems that demand may be spurred along as the RX Vega has been touted as “insanely good” for mining.

Over on the Overclockers UK forum, Gibbo posted about Vega’s hash rate being somewhere between 70 and 100MH/s. He got this figure from an add-in board partner, which makes sense given those companies are one of the few places to already have RX Vega GPUs in-hand. Gibbo did add that it is possible his source was “smoking the BS pipe” but if the hash rate turns out to be accurate, then the RX Vega could be in very high demand.

For comparison sake, the RX 580 is capable of around 25 MH/s, while the GTX 1080Ti can hit around 32MH/s. With that in mind, the RX Vega could be one of the more lucrative mining GPUs, though that won’t matter much if power usage is significantly higher.

Still, to try and avoid miners snapping up all of the stock, the folks over at OCUK are currently brainstorming ways to ensure gamers can grab the RX Vega at MSRP without miners nabbing all the stock and forcing price hikes early on. There are no final details in place yet but we’ll see exactly what’s going on once retail availability lands in a couple of weeks.

KitGuru Says: This mining resurgence has been a pain for those looking to upgrade their graphics cards. Fortunately, it sounds like companies are all very aware of it at this point and are actively trying to compensate for it, whether it be through a boost in stock or limitations on how many GPUs one person can order.

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Dragon Age: The Veilguard Steam

Dragon Age: The Veilguard breaks EA Steam player records

Despite a controversial review period, it seems as though Dragon Age: The Veilguard is a success, breaking multiple Steam concurrent player records for EA.

8 comments

  1. FU*K! 🙁

  2. A simple solution would be for them to limit sales of the cards by shipping address to like 4-5 unless they’re a verified reseller.

  3. I’d say 3 per credit card+household/person.

  4. 2 would make more sense for the first month or two less then 5% of regular users will have more then 2 cards

  5. Its going to be great profit for AMD GPU business but some AMD gamers may have trouble getting one.. including me.. trying to decide between a Vega RX or Vega FE..

  6. You can’t really go saying “Vega hash rate being…” You should definitely add the algorithm you are talking about. The hashrate can be anything from 1 hash to 1 gigahash per second depending on the algo. I understand that you are talking about dagger-hashimoto that it used for Ethereum mining, but not everyone understands it by just generally talking about “hash speed”.

  7. its a good thing that AMD designed Vega to have some hefty power requirement, that should keep miners away hopefully

  8. If you find it useful, I have made a calc for mining that will show how much VRAM will be used in mining
    https://investoon.com/tools/dag_size