AMD’s dual-GPU Radeon HD 6990 launched 15 years ago — power, heat, and noise monster was crowned the fastest graphics card in the world

AMD’s dual-GPU Radeon HD 6990
(Image credit: 3DTested)

15 years ago, AMD released its powerful Radeon HD 6990 graphics card (review link). This flagship dual-GPU hot rod, codenamed Antilles, was several months late in March 2011 and poked its head out only a couple of weeks before Nvidia’s reply. Nevertheless, the dual-Cayman XT GPU board, with a majestic-for-the-era 4GB of VRAM, became the world’s fastest graphics card (though that was an honor AMD already held with the Radeon HD 5970 2GB). To reach this PC performance pinnacle, AMD perhaps pushed the silicon a little too hard, though, with reviews of the time complaining about heat, noise, and power consumption.

(Image credit: 3DTested)
  • Dual Cayman XT 40nm GPUs, packing 3072 stream processors and 5.28bn transistors combined
  • Standard GPU clock of 830 MHz, OC up to 880 MHz
  • 4GB GDDR5 (2GB per GPU)
  • Five-display support
  • Massive 375 W TDP, with OC modes pushing 450W (dual BIOS switch innovation)
  • Dual-slot 12-inch PCB with two 8-pin connectors
  • Flagship pricing at $699

If you want some in-depth analysis of what AMD’s Antilles represented at the time, please check out our 16-page review from March 2011.

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Our test suite would embrace a slew of DirectX 11 titles. Most readers will be familiar with the F1, Battlefield, and Metro franchises, which featured in our tests. If you still play any of these classics, compare the results from the HD 6990 with what you can achieve using your modern GPU. Bonus points: Can your iGPU beat the Quad-CrossFire configuration of the HD 6990 in Crysis?

3DTested: AMD Radeon HD 6990 4 GB Noise Test - YouTube 3DTested: AMD Radeon HD 6990 4 GB Noise Test - YouTube
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Above, 3DTested’s Editor Emeritus, Chris Angelini, performs an AMD Radeon HD 6990 4GB noise test.

As we have already hinted, 3DTested wasn’t impressed by the heat, power consumption, and noise during the Radeon HD 6990 tests. Moreover, we thought, as an alternative, that a pair of Radeon HD 6970 s sacrificed nothing except space in your case.

A couple of weeks later, Nvidia replied with its noticeably quieter dual-GPU GeForce GTX 590, but it couldn’t quite manage to usurp the Radeon HD 6990.

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Mark Tyson
News Editor
  • PSUpower
    Ah, the good old days; when you didn't have to sell your kidneys, in order to buy a good GPU, and AMD was still competitive at the high-end.
    Reply
  • leclod
    PSUpower said:
    Ah, the good old days; when you didn't have to sell your kidneys, in order to buy a good GPU, and AMD was still competitive at the high-end.
    It costed 700usd in 2011, wouldn't that be 1000usd today? (Back then the US dollar was higher)
    AMD is competitive at the high-end (9700XT is high end to me at least).
    Reply
  • PSUpower
    leclod said:
    It costed 700usd in 2011, wouldn't that be 1000usd today? (Back then the US dollar was higher)

    I wasn't necessarily referring to 6990, but still; good luck buying a flagship GPU today, for "just" $1,000.
    Reply
  • Notton
    It's actually 2 GPUs for $700 in 2011.
    So you would have to double the price of a 5090 or whatever.
    And you wouldn't even be getting the whole deal, as 2x 5090's don't include a PCIe switch.
    Reply
  • beyondlogic
    Good old days when GPU were space heaters now they just catch fire
    Reply
  • ezst036
    Back in the day when AMD actually tried to compete, wanted to compete, and sought to compete with Nvidia.
    Reply
  • PSUpower
    ezst036 said:
    Back in the day when AMD actually tried to compete, wanted to compete, and sought to compete with Nvidia.

    Nowadays, it's all about data centers sales, for both of them.
    Reply
  • thestryker
    Enjoying the retrospective pieces popping up and look forward to more.

    The biggest problem with AMD for Crossfire and dual GPU cards is that their frame pacing was a lot worse than nvidia's. So even though the 6990 was faster than the 590 it typically was a worse experience.

    Currently I don't think there's any reason for anyone to target the x90 tier nvidia cards, but it would be nice to see competition for everything below it. I know it wouldn't be likely to help pricing a whole lot, but it might loosen the vice grip nvidia has on the discrete market.
    Reply
  • leclod
    PSUpower said:
    I wasn't necessarily referring to 6990, but still; good luck buying a flagship GPU today, for "just" $1,000.
    Notton said:
    So you would have to double the price of a 5090 or whatever.
    To me 5090 is at least 6990 level or Titan or...
    Couldn't you think the 5080 is the current flagship at a decent price?
    (The 5090 being a cherry on top because people are ready to pay for that)
    The 5080 launch price was $1,000
    Reply
  • Notton
    5080 going for anywhere between US$1300~1900, so $2600~$3000 + whatever a PCIe switch costs these days
    Reply