Testseek.co.uk have collected 162 expert reviews of the AMD Radeon R9 Nano 4GB GDDR5 PCIe and the average rating is 82%. Scroll down and see all reviews for AMD Radeon R9 Nano 4GB GDDR5 PCIe.
September 2015
(82%)
162 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
820100162
The editors liked
Best SFF performance
True innovation
Lots more perf with OC
HBM memory
Looks the business
Great performance
Quiet operation at low loads
HBM is innovative
Extremely low power consumption for performance
Compact size is ideal for small form factor
High
End gaming performance
Efficient for a Fiji GPU
Teeny weeny
Great performance for its size
Arguably preferable to the Fury X
Tiny design – small enough for mini-ITX
Stonking performance at high resolutions
High Bandwidth Memory used
Brings new levels of performance to the SFF graphics card market
Comfortably outperforms other SFF offerings (GTX 970 and R9 380)
Capable of playable 4K performance
Cooling solution keeps the GPU temperatures in line
Cooling solution is not loud enoug
The editors didn't like
Clear coil whine on sample
No overclocking on memory
No HDMI 2.0
Crossfire R9 Nano’s defeats the ideal of small form factor suitability
Neutral
4GB HBM is good for now
But very little future-proofing
“The R9 Nano in Crossfire is an amazing achievement for AMD and a great step in the right direction for the future o
Super
Expensive
Size is less of a mini
ITX issue now
4GB HBM limit
Coil whine
Other cards already accomplish its goal
Can't handle 4K in every game
Ruinously expensive
High-pitched capacitor whine
A little slower than current flagships
Retail price is significantly above its closest performance competitor (the GTX 980)
Cooler design exhausts some air directly into the chassis
Rear components can get hot and there is no backplate
Abstract: Both Warhammer and Total War are popular game series, however this isn't the only reason as to why the new game Total War: Warhammer is interesting. The game also has a DirectX 12 mode. In this review we test Warhammar with 20 GPUs in DirectX 12: the numb...
Great performance, Quiet operation at low loads, HBM is innovative, Extremely low power consumption for performance, Compact size is ideal for small form factor,
Crossfire R9 Nano’s defeats the ideal of small form factor suitability, Neutral, 4GB HBM is good for now, but very little future-proofing, “The R9 Nano in Crossfire is an amazing achievement for AMD and a great step in the right direction for the future o
PriceSince the initial launch of the R9 Fury X, HBMv1 stock levels and prices have plateaued. This has resulted in the R9 Nano being available for as little as £469.99 from OverclockersUK. In the US, the R9 Nano range has slightly dropped in price and can...
Published: 2015-09-26, Author: Dave , review by: techradar.com
High, end gaming performance, Efficient for a Fiji GPU, Teeny weeny
Super, expensive, Size is less of a mini, ITX issue now, 4GB HBM limit, Coil whine
The Radeon R9 Nano matches impressive scale with high-end performance, but the price is prohibitive especially when size is really not so much of an issue anymore...
Tiny design – small enough for mini-ITX, Stonking performance at high resolutions, High Bandwidth Memory used
Ruinously expensive, High-pitched capacitor whine, A little slower than current flagships
AMD's latest card is one of its most outlandish and impressive. It's the first time I've seen true high-end power inside a card that's small enough to comfortably fit inside a mini-ITX chassis – and it achieves this without becoming too hot or loud. It...
Great performance for its size, Arguably preferable to the Fury X
Other cards already accomplish its goal, Expensive, Can't handle 4K in every game
The R9 Nano is a novel idea for a card. It's built on the theory that gamers want a card with high performance in a small package. Whether that's true or not remains to be seen, but either way, the R9 Nano is unlikely to satisfy those in the market for...
Published: 2015-09-10, Author: Richard , review by: eurogamer.net
The R9 Nano packs an unprecedented amount of rendering power into an absolutely tiny product, and possesses superb build quality. The background 'buzz' on our sample is a concern, but in terms of the overall cooling assembly, it works very well - the Nano...
A product which pushes boundaries… sometimes too far. Not cheap but for certain consumers who want to work around its issues this will be a product which brings new performance levels to small form factor systems...
Best SFF performance, True innovation, Lots more perf with OC, HBM memory, Looks the business
Clear coil whine on sample, No overclocking on memory, No HDMI 2.0
AMD most likely understands that it won't have clear consumer GPU performance leadership in this round of launches, with the GeForce GTX Titan X and partner-clocked GTX 980 Tis holding a reasonable advantage at a 4K resolution.But winning the hearts...
Enthusiasts fond of space-saving gaming PCs have dreamed of a graphics card that runs as fast as a factory-overclocked Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 at Full HD resolution, and even faster at Ultra HD, while being smaller, lighter and even a bit less power hungry...