AMD has introduced two new graphics cards based on the chipmaker’s previous RDNA 3 architecture. The Radeon RX 7400 is an economical gaming graphics card targeting budget-conscious gamers, while the Radeon Pro W7400 caters to the professional and workstation markets.
The Radeon RX 7400 and Radeon Pro W7400 are based on AMD’s Navi 33 (codenamed Hotpink Bonefish) silicon, which is likely the reason why the company decided to roll these out quietly without any fanfare. Navi 33 is also found in other lower-tier SKUs, including the Radeon RX 7600, Radeon RX 7600 XT, and the Radeon RX 7650 GRE. Navi 33, being the smallest silicon inside the RDNA 3 family, should be even cheaper to produce now, so it’s reasonable to reuse it inside the Radeon RX 7400 and Radeon Pro W7400.
The Radeon RX 7400 features 28 RDNA 3 Compute Units (CUs), equivalent to 1,792 Stream Processors (SPs). This is 12.5% less than the Radeon RX 7600 in SPs, so the performance gap likely won’t be significant. While both graphics cards’ memory subsystems are similar, they’re not equal.
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AMD has equipped the Radeon RX 7400 with slower GDDR6 memory, clocked at 10.8 Gbps, compared to the 18 Gbps on the Radeon RX 7600. As a result, the former’s memory bandwidth is 40% lower. The Radeon RX 7400 comes with DisplayPort 2.1 and HDMI 2.1 support.